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IRS
Warns of New E-Mail and Telephone Scams Using the IRS Name;
Advance
Payment Scams Starting
IR-2008-11, Jan. 30, 2008
The IRS cautioned taxpayers
to be on the lookout for scams involving proposed advance payment checks. Although the
government has not yet enacted an economic stimulus package in which the IRS would provide
advance payments, known informally as rebates to many Americans, a scam which uses the
proposed rebates as bait has already cropped up.
The goal of the scams is to
trick people into revealing personal and financial information, such as Social Security,
bank account or credit card numbers, which the scammers can use to commit identity theft.
Typically, identity thieves
use a victims personal and financial data to empty the victims financial
accounts, run up charges on the victims existing credit cards, apply for new loans,
credit cards, services or benefits in the victims name, file fraudulent tax returns
or even commit crimes. Most of these fraudulent activities can be committed electronically
from a remote location, including overseas. Committing these activities in cyberspace
allows scamsters to act quickly and cover their tracks before the victim becomes aware of
the theft.
People whose identities have
been stolen can spend months or years and their hard-earned money cleaning
up the mess thieves have made of their reputations and credit records. In the meantime,
victims may lose job opportunities, may be refused loans, education, housing or cars, or
even get arrested for crimes they didn't commit.
The most
recent scams brought to IRS attention are described below.
Rebate Phone Call
At least
one scheme using the word rebate as part of the lure has been identified. In
that scam, consumers receive a phone call from someone identifying himself as an IRS
employee. The caller tells the targeted victim that he is eligible for a sizable rebate
for filing his taxes early. The caller then states that he needs the targets bank
account information for the direct deposit of the rebate. If the target refuses, he is
told that he cannot receive the rebate.
This phone
call is a scam. No legislation has yet been enacted that would allow the IRS to provide
advance payments to taxpayers or that determines the details of those payments. Moreover,
the IRS does not force taxpayers to use direct deposit. Those who opt for direct deposit
do so by completing the appropriate section of their tax return, with bank routing and
account information, when they file; the IRS does not gather the information by telephone.
Refund e-Mail
The IRS
has seen several variations of a refund-related bogus e-mail which falsely claims to come
from the IRS, tells the recipient that he or she is eligible for a tax refund for a
specific amount, and instructs the recipient to click on a link in the e-mail to access a
refund claim form. The form asks the recipient to enter personal information that the
scamsters can then use to access the e-mail recipients bank or credit card account.
In a new
wrinkle, the current version of the refund scam includes two paragraphs that appear to be
directed toward tax-exempt organizations that distribute funds to other organizations or
individuals. The e-mail contains the name and supposed signature of the Director of the
IRSs Exempt Organizations business division.
This
e-mail is a phony. The IRS does not send unsolicited e-mail about tax account matters to
individual, business, tax-exempt or other taxpayers.
Filing a
tax return is the only way to apply for a tax refund; there is no separate application
form. Taxpayers who wish to find out if they are due a refund from their last annual tax
return filing may use the Wheres My Refund? interactive application on
the IRS Web site at IRS.gov. The only official IRS Web site is located at www.irs.gov.
Audit e-Mail
Another
new scam brought to IRS attention contains features not seen before by the IRS. Using a technique calculated to get almost
anyones attention, the e-mail notifies the recipient that his or her tax return will
be audited. This is the first scam of which the IRS is aware that uses this to get the
victim to respond.
Unusual
for a scam e-mail, it may contain a salutation in the body addressed to the specific
recipient by name. Most scam e-mails seen by the IRS are sent using the same technique
used by spammers, in which hundreds of thousands of messages are sent to potential victims
based on Internet address. Because of the volume, the typical scam e-mail is not
personalized.
This
e-mail instructs the recipient to click on links to complete forms with personal and
account information, which the scammers will use to commit identity theft.
This
e-mail is a phony. The IRS does not send unsolicited, tax-account related e-mails to
taxpayers.
Changes to Tax Law e-Mail
Paper Check Phone Call
In a
current telephone scam, a caller claims to be an IRS employee who is calling because the
IRS sent a check to the individual being called. The caller states that because the check
has not been cashed, the IRS wants to verify the individuals bank account number.
The caller may have a foreign accent.
In
reality, the IRS leaves it entirely up to the individual to choose to cash or not cash a
paper check. The IRS has no business need to know, and does not ask for, bank account or
similar information, except when taxpayers indicate on their tax return that they are
opting for the direct electronic deposit of their refund. In that case, however, it is the
individuals responsibility to provide the IRS with the correct bank routing and
account numbers on the tax return; the IRS does not contact taxpayers to verify the
information.
Those who
have received a questionable telephone call that claims to come from the IRS may also use
the phishing@irs.gov mailbox to notify the IRS of
the scam.
The IRS
has issued previous warnings on scams that use the IRS to lure victims into believing the
scam is legitimate. More information on identity theft, phishing and telephone scams using
the IRS name, logo or spoofed (copied) Web site is available on the IRS Web site at
IRS.gov. Enter the terms phishing,
identity theft or e-mail scams into the search box in the upper
right corner of the front page.
Related Information:
·
FS-2008-9, Identity
Theft E-Mails Scams a Growing Problem
·
IR-2007-109, IRS Warns
Taxpayers of New E-mail Scams
·
Suspicious e-Mails and
Identity Theft