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The IRS Has A Billion Dollars to Hand Out

March 9, 2017 by admin

Steven A. Leahy

The IRS Has A Billion Dollars to Hand Out

You may have heard the news that the IRS is searching for over a million tax payers to hand out more than a billion dollars. Here is what is happening. The IRS has ten years to collect delinquent taxes from taxpayer. This is referred to as the Collection Statute Expiration Date (CSED). However, if the IRS owes taxpayers refunds for tax years with unfiled tax returns, the taxpayer only has three years from the due date to collect this refund. And, if the taxpayer is also entitled to an Earned Income Tax Credit, those funds too, must be claimed within three years of the tax return due date.

If taxpayers have unfiled tax returns and it appears to the IRS there will be a tax liability, the IRS takes it upon themselves to file a Substitute for Return (SFR). The SFR is not a service, it is a penalty! They prepare your taxes in order to assess a tax – the IRS can’t collect a tax that has yet to be assessed. Generally, the SFR overstates the true tax obligation of the taxpayer. However, the IRS begins collection efforts to collect the assessed tax. It may take the IRS some years to assess the tax for an unfiled return – and the CSED does not begin until the tax is assessed. So, the IRS has additional time, from the date of assessment – not from the date the tax return is due, to collect the assessed tax.

If it appears the taxpayer has a refund due, the IRS does not complete the SFR. Therefore, a tax is never assessed, so the IRS does not calculate what your refund would be. They leave it to the taxpayer to calculate that number.

This year, 2017, tax-day is April 18th. This is the second-year tax-day has landed on April 18th rather than April 15th. The reason that is revolves around a little-known Washington DC Holiday, Emancipation Day. Here is the rule:

Generally, if a due date for performing any act for tax purposes falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the act is considered to be performed timely if it is performed no later than the next day that isn’t a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. The term legal holiday means any legal holiday in the District of Columbia. The calendars provided in this publication make the adjustment for Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. But you must make any adjustments for statewide legal holidays, as discussed later.

Emancipation Day is a Washington DC holiday every April 16th. The holiday celebrates the DC Compensated Emancipation Act of 1862 that ended slavery in Washington DC. When April 16 falls on a Saturday, the holiday shifts to Friday. That’s why 2016 tax-day was moved to the next Monday, April 18th. This year, 2017, the holiday falls on a Sunday, so the holiday shifts to the next Monday, April 17th. And, because April 15th is a Saturday, the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday or holiday is Tuesday April 18th.

Next year, 2018, April 15th will be on Sunday and Emancipation Day will fall on Monday Apirl 16th. Next year, tax-day will fall to Tuesday April 17th.
I have several clients with unfiled tax returns, many dating back before 2013. Several of these clients are W-2 employees, and likely have a refund due. So, we are concentrating on getting their 2013 tax returns completed and filed BEFORE Tuesday April 18, 2017 to make sure they receive credit for the refund they have coming.

If you owe the IRS for taxes pre-dating 2013, and you fail to claim your return timely, the IRS WILL NOT use the refund to offset those taxes. In this situation, Taxpayers are hit with a double whammy.

If you have unfiled tax returns dating back to 2013 – call my office today, right now! We can still complete those returns and get them filed so you can claim your refund. You should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: “Tax Relief Chicago”, “Tax Relief”, Chicago Tax Help, IRS Help, IRS Help Chicago, irs options, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Tax Help Chicago, Tax Problem Help, tax resolution, Tax Solution

IRS Problems: Know Where You Are Before You Can Get Where You Want To Be

July 6, 2016 by admin

Steven A. Leahy

Find Out Where You Are So You Can Get Where You Want To Be

By Steven A Leahy

Too often clients come to see me with IRS problems and tell me how to solve their problem. When I ask, how much they owe? How old is the debt? How much is penalties? How much is interest? They don’t have an answer.

How can you know how to solve a problem, if you don’t even understand what the problem is? IRS problems are no different from any other problem. Understanding the problem goes a long way to figuring out how to solve the problem Radio and television ads always push to pay the IRS pennies on the dollars – an offer-in-compromise. So, that’s the remedy clients want. They want to pay pennies on the dollar. The problem is, an offer-in-compromise is NOT the right answer for every case. In fact, putting an offer-in-compromise forward may be exactly the wrong way to solve your IRS problem.

Begin with an Investigation

So, let’s start at the beginning. First learn exactly where you are. Only then can you chart a course to get you where you want to be. To learn where you are, my office completes an complete investigation. The investigation begins by gathering all of the information we can from the IRS. The IRS has account transcripts for every year, wage Transcripts, tax return transcripts, just to name a few. These transcripts contain lots of information about your IRS problem. At my office, we have access to a a propitiatory software package that takes all that IRS information and puts it into a form we can use to understand it.

The report will detail how much you owe; how much is penalties, and how much is interest. The report will analysis the dates of assessments, the number of tolling days, the Collection Statute Expiration Dates, and the important dates concerning the dischargability of taxes in bankruptcy. The report also provides a breakdown of every payment the taxpayer has made and how they were applied. The report will also reveal if the IRS prepared a tax return for the taxpayer (known as a Substitute for Return, or SFR) or if some returns are still unfiled.

Once we know where the IRS puts you, we gather information about your particular financial situation. We gather this information on IRS Form 433. This form collects the taxpayers income, assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Only after we have all this information can we compose a strategy to solve your IRS problems.

The Six Things You Can Do If You Owe The IRS

Remember, there are only six things you can do if you owe the IRS money. You can pay the IRS what they claim you owe. You can enter into one of several kinds of installment agreements. You can submit an Offer-in-Compromise (offer a lump sum settlement). You can have the IRS place you in a Currently not Collectible status (get the IRS to leave you alone for a time without payments). You can seek protection under the bankruptcy code. Or, finally, you can do nothing and let the IRS have their way with you.

Don’t let someone tell you they know how get you where you want to be (solve your IRS problem) – unless they know where you are now. That’s why a complete investigation is so important.

If you are facing IRS Problems, call Opem Tax Resolutions at 312-664-6649. If you mention this blog post, we will complete the first step, the IRS analysis report, for FREE.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, “Tax Relief Chicago”, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Help Chicago, IRS Options Help, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, IRS Tax Problem, Offer in Compromise IRS, Offer in compromise Settlement, tax resolution, taxes and bankruptcy

IRS Lien vs Levy

February 26, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
IRS Lien vs Levy

By Steven A Leahy

On the IRS Radio Hour I often talk about the way the IRS works. The most important aspect of how the IRS works goes directly to how the IRS can collect assessed taxes from taxpayers, outside of voluntary agreements, like installment agreements, offers-in-compromise, currently not collectible, and bankruptcy. When a taxpayer ignores, or otherwise fails to negotiate a work out with the IRS, the IRS may take some drastic actions. The most dramatic action is a levy. This article will clear up IRS Lien vs Levy.

Many taxpayers confuse a levy and a lien. A federal tax lien is the federal government’s legal claim against a taxpayer’s property when a taxpayer neglects or fails to pay a tax debt. The IRS files a public document, the Notice of Federal Tax Lien, with the county recorder to alert the taxpayer’s creditors that the federal government has a legal right to the taxpayer’s property. A lien does not result in seizure of any of the taxpayer’s property.

A federal levy, on the other hand, is a legal seizure of a taxpayer’s property to satisfy a tax debt. If a taxpayer fails to pay the assessed tax, or make satisfactory arrangements to settle the debt, the IRS may seize any type of asset, real or personal.

There is a three-pronged procedure in place the IRS must follow in order to justify a levy. First, after the IRS assesses a tax, they must send a Notice and Demand For Payment. Second, the taxpayer must neglect or refuse to pay the tax. Finally, the IRS must send the taxpayer a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to A Hearing. The Taxpayer has 30 days from the date of that notice to request a Collection Due Process hearing with the Office of Appeals.

Once the IRS fulfills their obligations under the three-pronged procedure, they can seize any property the taxpayer is holding (including, cars, boats, houses), or any property someone else is holding (wages, retirement accounts, bank accounts, rental income, accounts receivables, cash value of life insurance or commissions).

In my practice I have seen levies against rental income – the revenue officer actually visited the taxpayer’s tenants each month to collect the rent before the taxpayer could collect; levies against insurance payments due a doctor – the IRS ordered all insurance carriers to send all payments to the IRS; levies on commissions – the IRS contacted the contract employer and levied, took, all commissions the taxpayer was due. A Taxpayer should never under-estimate the creativity of an IRS Revenue Officer looking to levy assets to collect on an IRS obligation.

The two most common levies involve bank accounts and wages; low hanging fruit. Remember, a bank must report any interest paid of at least $10.00 with form 1099-int. So, the IRS knows where most every taxpayer banks. Once a bank receives a Notice of Levy, the taxpayer’s account is frozen – the bank must hold any money in the account, up to the amount you owe, for twenty-one days. After twenty-one days the bank must send the money, plus interest, to the IRS. Any money deposited in the account after the date of levy, is NOT included in the levy. However, the IRS can issue more than one levy on the same account. I have seen accounts levied each week for months on end.

Finally, the levy most taxpayer’s fear is the wage levy. A wage levy is often referred to as a wage garnishment. The IRS issues a wage levy to the taxpayer’s employer, and the employer is obligated to send all net income, less exemptions, to the IRS CONTINUOUSLY. The more a taxpayer makes, the more the IRS will take. Generally, the exemptions are calculated by determining the standard deduction and the amount deductible for exemptions on an income tax return for the year the levy is served, divided by Fifty-two. The exempt income is designed to provide minimal sustenance – not enough to pay your expense. To do that, the taxpayer must work out an agreement with the IRS.

If you are facing IRS Collection Efforts, you should work with a local law firm that understands the IRS Collection procedures and will work to get you the best deal possible. You should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: IRS Radio Hour Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Levy, IRS Lien, irs options, IRS Options Help, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Offer in Compromise IRS, Tax Debts, Tax Help Chicago, tax options Chicago, Tax Problem Help, tax resolution, taxes and bankruptcy

IRS Audits – What are they looking for?

February 26, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
IRS Audits – What are they looking for?

By Steven A Leahy

The IRS calls an audit an “Examination of Returns.” The IRS accepts most federal tax returns just as they are filed. Some returns, however, are selected for review. The IRS selects returns for audit by computerized screening, random sample, or by an income document matching program. An examination can take place in several ways. Some audits are handled exclusively by US Mail, in the taxpayer’s home or place of business, at an IRS office or at your representative’s office. The time, place, and manner of the audit are negotiable.

Here are nine “red flags” the IRS uses to select a return to audit:

1. Make a mistake on your tax return – Gross errors will bring immediate scrutiny to your return and cause the IRS to audit your return. Simple math errors, not signing a paper return, leaving off or incorrectly listing your social security number are common ways to invite IRS scrutiny.

2. Round off the entries on your tax form – Generally, life doesn’t happen in round numbers. If you use round numbers, it tells the IRS that the numbers may be fictitious, or at least not accurate.

3. File late, or not at all – When you file late, the return is not processed with the hoard of annual filers. Instead, your return will be processed by a person, looking at the details of your return.

4. Be a Tax Protester – Tax protesters don’t believe the IRS has legitimate authority to collect taxes and they thumb their nose at the IRS by filing returns that indicate zero tax owed (if a tax protester files a return at all). Tax protestors can count on the IRS assigning a revenue agent to review it.

5. Have unreported Foreign accounts – Foreign banks have been reporting American account holders to the IRS for some time now. So, even if you don’t report the foreign account, you can be assured that the foreign financial institution will.

6. Don’t report some income – Companies are to issue a 1099 for any payments over $600.00 or W-2s to employees. So, if you don’t report some income, the company that paid you will likely report the payment in a 1099 or W-2 and the IRS will have the paperwork to match against your return.

7. Claim large charitable contributions – This is an easy target for the IRS. The IRS can simply audit you by mail and ask for substantiation for all deductions.

8. Take a repeated loss on a home based business – If a business loses money for 3 out of 5 years, the IRS considers that activity to be a hobby, not a business. If it is a hobby, you can only deduct losses equal to or less than income. You can’t use the losses in a hobby to offset taxes from other income.

9. Use an unscrupulous tax preparer – When the IRS notices a specific tax preparer is preparing returns that generate large refunds the IRS is likely to audit ALL the taxpayers who used that tax preparer. So, be careful whom you hire.

Generally, the IRS has three years from the due date to audit a return. That explains why the IRS will usually conduct an audit for three consecutive years, rather than just one. There are exceptions to the three year rule. For example, if you underreport your income by more than twenty-five percent, the IRS has six years to audit. And, if a taxpayer files a fraudulent or false return, there isn’t a time limit on an audit.

So, if you are facing an IRS audit, or have already been audited, you should work with a local law firm that will work to get you through the audit process and collections in the best way possible. You should give me a call – Opem Tax Resolutions & The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC (312) 664-6649. Call NOW to set up your FREE Consultation.

Filed Under: IRS Radio Hour Tagged With: “Owe Taxes”, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Levy, IRS Lien, irs options, IRS Options Help, IRS problem, IRS Tax Debt, Offer in Compromise IRS, Tax Debts, Tax Help Chicago, tax options Chicago, Tax Problem Help, tax resolution, taxes and bankruptcy

Who Should Not Prepare Their Own 2014 Tax Returns

January 12, 2015 by admin

Steven A. Leahy
Who Should Not Prepare Their Own Tax Returns

By Steven A Leahy

My last post was directed to those who should prepare their own returns. Remember, for the majority of people, preparing your own return makes sense; it may save you money, allows you to maintain control and may increase your understanding of your financial situation. But preparing a return isn’t right for everyone.

For those who own property or investments, own a business, are recently married, divorced or had a child, or if you aren’t a “numbers” person, aren’t interested in keeping up with changes in tax law, don’t understand the tax jargon on irs.gov, and prefer not to spend your free time working for the IRS, it makes sense to hire a tax professional to help you with your annual tax return.

Preparing your own taxes costs less up-front. According to the IRS, the average taxpayer filing a 1040 form (68% of all filiers) will spend 22 hours filing their taxes. It breaks down like this: form completion (4 hours), record keeping (10 hours), tax planning (3 hours), form submission (1 hour), “other” (3 hours). The average cost to hire a tax professional to prepare 1040 tax return is around $250.

Generally, I recommend tax preparation to avoid a tax audit. Having a professional prepare your tax return is not a guarantee you will not be audited – but it does cut down the odds. The IRS looks for “red flags.” Tax professionals can reduce, or eliminate red flags. Also, having a professional prepare your tax returns insulates you from the IRS. We prepare tax returns, but I always have a independent third party prepare my personal tax return and the business tax returns.

Those who are in an ongoing installment agreement, currently not collectible or were recently granted an offer-in-compromise should do all they can to ensure that there tax returns are prepared and filed on time. If the filing the return is delayed for ANY reason, you may find the agreement cancelled. Yes, the IRS can even rescind an accepted offer-in-compromise after the fact.

When the IRS accepts an offer in compromise, part of the agreement requires the taxpayer to remain in compliance for at least the next five years. That means the taxpayer must file all tax returns and pay all taxes due on time for the next five years. If the IRS calls an offer in compromise in default, the IRS will begin collecting what was originally owed.

Many who fall behind on their taxes are procrastinators at heart. Therefore, those who have a history of IRS problems should not wait until April to begin thinking about preparing their tax returns. The consequences are just too great. Get in front of the problem.

I recommend the IRS Protection Plan offered by Opem Tax Resolution and the Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC. This program anticipates the tax compliance requirements including, timely tax preparation, on-going IRS monitoring, resolution of IRS actions (cancellation of installment agreements or currently not collectible status and defaulting an offer in compromise). In addition, developing a relationship with a tax team will give you access to tax planning to avoid IRS problems in the future and minimize your tax burden.

If you are considering hiring a tax professional to complete your 2014 tax return, consider giving Opem Tax Resolutions and The Law Office of Steven A. Leahy, PC a call. We prepare old unfiled tax returns, as well as current returns. So, if you are a number of years behind in your filing, we can help get you in compliance with the IRS. Call (312) 664-6649 today and ask Bonnie to set up a time to talk me about your tax returns.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 2014 Tax Return Preparation, back taxes, Chicago Tax Help, Help With IRS, IRS Problems, IRS Tax Debt, steven a. leahy, tax attorney chicago, tax resolution

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