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IRS fight against ID theft might delay tax refunds

By Richard Rubin / Bloomberg News
Published: January 30. 2013 4:00AM PST

WASHINGTON — Some taxpayers seeking a quick refund may have to wait longer than usual this year as the Internal Revenue Service tries to stop criminals who steal others’ identities and file fraudulent returns.

The agency, which begins accepting 2012 returns today, is making its automated system more sensitive to signs of potential fraud, meaning some returns will get a closer look. Last year, the IRS prevented $20 billion in fraudulent refunds from being issued, up from $14 billion the previous year.

The tax agency’s efforts to combat identity theft reflect the tension in the IRS’s multiple missions, said Benson Goldstein, a senior technical manager at the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants in Washington.

The IRS has been trying to shorten processing times to accelerate refunds, in part to encourage electronic filing and in part to reduce taxpayers’ reliance on short-term loans. The speed of refunds presented an opportunity for fraud.

“It’s a difficult responsibility for the IRS," said Goldstein, who said some legitimate taxpayers may have their refunds delayed. “They’re there to get the prompt refunds but at the same time to protect the U.S. Treasury."

The IRS expects to meet its goal of delivering 90 percent of refunds within 21 days, Michelle Eldridge, a spokeswoman for the agency, said in an interview yesterday. That compares with months of waiting for taxpayers who are victims of identity theft.

The agency is trying to be careful and “underpromise and overdeliver," said John Hewitt, founder and chief executive officer of Liberty Tax Service, part of JTH Holding Inc., based in Virginia Beach, Va.

The IRS has long delayed refunds to prevent fraud, Hewitt said. This year’s efforts, combined with an expected flood of returns because of late congressional action that delayed the start of filing, may slow refunds by about a week, he said.

Taxpayer identity theft has become more prevalent in the past few years. For fiscal 2012, the IRS’s identity-theft unit received about 450,000 cases, up 78 percent over the previous year.

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