It’s tax season and a scam involving stolen data from tax professionals, fraudulent tax filings, and erroneous checking account deposits has law enforcement and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on high alert.
Here’s how the scam works and what to do if a mysterious tax refund appears in your checking account or mailbox.
Criminals use data they’ve stolen from tax professionals, including taxpayers’ names, addresses, banking information, and social security numbers. Then they file a phony tax return, resulting in a tax refund deposit into a taxpayer’s legitimate checking account.
This is when the criminals make contact with the taxpayer, using various tactics to reclaim the refund.
One tactic includes posing as a debt collection agency acting on behalf of the IRS and requesting that the taxpayer forward the money to the collection agency.
Another tactic takes a spin on the automated call scam with a recorded voice threatening the taxpayer with criminal action and providing a “case number” and telephone number to assist in returning the money.
The scams work if the taxpayer follows through with the criminals’ demands before filing his or her own legitimate return. When the legitimate return is filed, the taxpayer/victim receives notice from the IRS that a tax return has already been filed for the year and a refund issued, which, by then, is cash in the scammers’ pockets.
If you receive a tax refund for a return you haven’t filed, here’s what to do:
If the refund was direct deposited:
If the refund was issued by check and you haven’t cashed it:
If you have cashed the refund check:
Besides following these steps, contact your tax preparer immediately, as well as your financial institution and credit bureaus, and inform them of the breach. Note that by law, interest may accrue on erroneous refunds, which will be due to the IRS.
If you’ve filed your return with the IRS electronically and your return is rejected because a return with your taxpayer ID is already in their system, go to the IRS’s Taxpayer Guide to Identity Theft and follow the procedure they’ve outlined within. If you’re unable to file electronically, mail a paper tax return along with Form 14039, Identity Theft Affidavit (included in the above link), and let the IRS know you were the victim of a data breach.
An important takeaway here: the IRS initiates contact with taxpayers through the mail, not through a phone call. If you receive a telephone call from someone purporting to be from the IRS or handling IRS business, the call is most likely a scam. Hang up, and if you have any question about your return, call the IRS directly.
IRS mailing addresses
For your paper refund check, here are the IRS mailing addresses to use based on the city (possibly abbreviated). These cities are located on the check’s bottom text line in front of the words TAX REFUND:
If you’re a Hanscom FCU member and notice an erroneous deposit from the IRS in your checking account, immediately contact us at 800-656-4328 or stop by your local branch.
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