From Fortune via Yahoo! Finance:
Is the Internal Revenue Service targeting African-American and Hispanic taxpayers? That's the conclusion of a new study provided exclusively to Fortune titled "IRS Enforcement's Impact on Minority Communities," conducted by Thomas M. Evans, CEO of TaxLifeboat, a firm that advises taxpayers on resolving their problems with the IRS.
Evans stresses strongly that the disproportionate number of IRS actions against minorities isn't intentional. Rather, he charges, it's the result of overly rigid, highly-automated enforcement policies that waste taxpayer money by pursuing low-earners who either can't pay, or owe virtually nothing.
Worse, it pushes minority workers who were paying some, if not all, of their tax burden from mainstream jobs into the shadowy cash economy. "The IRS enforcement actions drive workers and revenue out of the system," warns Evans. "Once people are caught in that mill, their life changes, and they're forced to stay in the underclass."
The IRS doesn't specify the ethnic background of Americans it hits with enforcement actions. To explore the issue, Evans examined the 1,000 zip codes where the IRS had filed the largest number of liens from July 2009 to July 2010. He then mined the 2000 Census, the most recent source available, to determine the racial makeup of those areas. Evans found that, on average, the populations of those 1,000 locales with the nation's highest level of tax enforcement were 22% African-American and 24% Hispanic. That's approximately double the proportion of those minorities in entire country.
The top twenty zip codes for IRS liens range from sections in big cities such as New York and Chicago to suburbs such as Lawrenceville, Georgia outside of Atlanta, Katy, Texas a suburb of Houston, and New Castle, Delaware, a town near Wilmington.
Hiding in plain sight
Why do IRS actions fall so heavily on minorities? The principal reason is that low-earners, including an outsized number of blacks and Hispanics according to Evans' findings, commit the violations that are easiest to detect. The IRS's powerful computers screen the W-2 forms from employers against the returns filed by individuals. If the worker didn't file a return at all, or if they claim too many exemptions, the IRS automatically launches an "examination." That step frequently leads to an enforcement action, which can trigger severe penalties----garnishing wages, seizing homes, freezing bank accounts or the filing of tax liens that ruin credit ratings.
According to Evans, who advises thousands of low-income clients a year, many workers are so uninformed about the tax system that they think the amount withheld from their paychecks is sufficient payment. Hence, they don't file returns at all.
Others, he says, don't intentionally cheat, but "don't think that it's a priority to be tax compliant." They may neglect to report such items as credit card debt forgiveness, which is classified as income under the tax code. And, says Evans, they simply can't afford the $100 to $300 for an advisor to prepare their returns.
It frequently takes a couple of years for the IRS to present these folks with a bill for back taxes. That number can be scary: Adding interest and penalties doubles the amount due in less than five years.
Remarkably, many of the low-earners with IRS problems don't owe anything. Evans recently worked with a truck driver who hadn't filed a return in seven years, and faced a bill for $60,000. "He'd been paying through withholding," says Evans. "When we finally filed all the returns, and included his deductions, he owed $400."
When the IRS garnishes their wages, many former factory workers or security guards stop looking for higher-paying jobs, or quit their jobs altogether in favor of work in businesses where they're paid in cash. Nor are the enforcement actions cost effective, to say the least. "The IRS has no leverage with the poor, as they would with the affluent," says Evans. In the past eight years, spending on IRS enforcement has increased 17.8% adjusted for inflation. But revenue per enforcement action has fallen by almost one-third.
Evans isn't alone in his criticism of the IRS's pursuit of low-earners. Nina Olson, the National Taxpayer Advocate, an independent IRS official who reports to Congress on tax issues, said in a recent report, "The IRS policies fail to address the needs of low income taxpayers, and its lien-filing policies are harming and will continue to harm taxpayers' financial viability without strong evidence that they promote future compliance with the tax laws or even bring in substantial revenue."
Through a spokesman, the IRS declined to comment without seeing the report, which will be made public later on Thursday.
Read the rest on Yahoo! Finance.
BV Talk Back!
Questions:
-Do you feel that you or your loved ones have been harshly targeted by the IRS, despite not having intentionally violated the tax code with criminal intent?
-What did you do to right any wrongs with Uncle Sam? How did the IRS work with you?
-Will this report change the way you do your taxes? Will you be more careful or invest in a tax preparer now that you know minorities are more likely to be audited?
-What is your feeling about the IRS seeming to come after black celebrities in particular lately, such as Method Man, Wesley Snipes and Kelly Rowland? Could there be unreported racism in the system?
Leave your comments below!


Comments: (5)
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By: Brady on 12/03/2010 5:07PM
--Do you feel that you or your loved ones have been harshly targeted by the IRS, despite not having intentionally violated the tax code with criminal intent?
No I do not, becuase Ive studied this subject before, and Mr Evans is correct, it is not intentional targeting. People of color are the obvious recepients becuase of obvious fraud, especially concerning refundable credits, such as EIC.
Some people are notorious for selling Social security numbers, their own and their children. So you will see the same number show up 2 or 3 times during a tax year, Obvious fraud.
Or the same number will show up on a different tax return each year. Obvious fraud.
--What did you do to right any wrongs with Uncle Sam? How did the IRS work with you?
Never had to, becuase when i have questions i call them, and when i do, they are very helpful.
--Will this report change the way you do your taxes? Will you be more careful or invest in a tax preparer now that you know minorities are more likely to be audited?
Here is the rub Ms Stodghill, it is certain paid preparers who are doing the fraud. The average A/American is not a cheat, and if they make an honest error, just come clean and explain.
-What is your feeling about the IRS seeming to come after black celebrities in particular lately, such as Method Man, Wesley Snipes and Kelly Rowland? Could there be unreported racism in the system?
Dont care, we have to pay so should they, color is immaterial.
Further commentary.
Here is the deal, once a person signs the return that person becomes responsible. The reason why it appears they are targeting minorites is becuase, between jan 15 and apr 15, dishonest preparers target minorites. Espcially Black Tax prepaeres, sorry but its true. Not all, but far to many of blacks are targeting their own.
It is the one time during the year they know black folk will have money. So we are targets for not just tax preparation but very expensive tax financial products (rapid refunds, loans, credit etc).
They speailize in increasing refund amounts (fraudulent returns)and then get a piece of the return. The problem is some either really dont know or are complicit in the fraud. But it doesnt matter becuase once you sign, ITS ALL ON YOU.
They try to get the fraudulent preparer, but in the mean time they have you. Many foolishly think they have gotten away, but the IRS can and will go back 3 years on returns, its just not worth it.
Lastly we must understand, once again this is a self inflicted wound. They could not use us if we didnt let them. They excist in our community becuase we use them.
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By: eeduj1001 on 12/06/2010 12:13AM
I see more black celebrities coming under attack from IRS than white ones. The black ones going to jail. This cuts across all income levels of black people.
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By: Donna on 12/17/2010 1:14AM
Oh get real....I'm so tired of racial this and that...if anything..white men go to jail more than black men for tax evasion. We have the most stable black/white relations than ever before.
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By: Ruby on 12/06/2010 2:40PM
In 2001, I paid $125 to a reputable accountant to have my taxes filed. A year later, after I had stopped working due to my disability, I received a letter from IRS stating that I owed over $800. Upon examining my copy, I discovered the "paid accountant" had made an arithmetical error, but bore no responsibility for it. I had to pay this back. I never felt it was fair but I didn't know what else to do.
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By: Amy on 12/06/2010 2:52PM
If you don't pay or make arrangements to do so you go to jail. This man has made a lot of money in his life. Black or white he has no excuses. Unfairly Targeting Minorities....getting to be a ridiculously tired excuse. Keep using it though and it will get you what you deserve. Nowhere. The IRS only knows one color and that is green.
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