Quote:Fraud by IRS employees. Who would have thought that? **cough**Geithner**cough**
Hundreds of millions of dollars may have been paid to people who fraudulently or mistakenly took advantage of a lucrative tax credit for first-time home buyers, including some who were employees of the Internal Revenue Service
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The report found that more than 19,300 people claimed a total of $139 million on their 2008 tax returns before purchasing a home even though the law requires the purchase to take place first
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580 taxpayers under age 18 -- including some 4-year-olds -- claimed $4 million, presumably so their parents could dodge the income limitations imposed by the program.
Quote:Now there is a push going on to extend this program, and this report by the Treasury Inspector General is seemingly an irritation to the people who want to continue the program. An interesting fact about this program is that 60% of the people who have taken advantage of it have an adjusted gross income of less than $50,000. I'm currently trying to dig up the statistics on the values of homes purchased using this program, but it reeks of the same problem with the other programs which got us to where we are now with the high rate of defaults: let's get people get into mortgages who would otherwise not qualify, and who have limited finances to afford actual ownership responsibilities.
George went on to criticize the IRS for not requiring buyers to attach documents that verify when they purchased their homes, something his office has been advocating. The IRS's deputy commissioner for services and enforcement, Linda E. Stiff, said the agency does not have the ability to accept such documents electronically, nor does it have the legal authority to disallow a claim if the documents are not attached, which would make such a requirement moot.
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Despite recommendations made in our November 25, 2008, memorandum as part of a prior audit, the IRS did not use information provided on the First-Time Homebuyer Credit (Form 5405) to verify eligibility requirements to claim the Credit and did not require taxpayers to provide documentation to substantiate the purchase of a home.
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In addition, taxpayers who appear not to be first-time homebuyers (based on their prior tax return information) were claiming the Credit.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:I don't think it's ALL bad, Pig...frankly, this is a great way to "red-flag" habitual tax evaders and abusers. The IRS will come down on them like a swarm of locusts, and find all their other mischiefs to also nail them on.
sndsgood wrote:people lie and cheat on their taxes every year. hopefully they can catch most of them and give them a nice big penelaty.While this is true, I have two things to say about it:
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:The only reason you've been exposed to this "news" is because it furthers your handlers' agenda. Another tempest in a teapot designed to make your obedient self froth at the mouth and wave a flaming stick with the mob. Reasonably now...how could you have any earthly IDEA how much actual tax fraud occurs, or if this is even unusual with a new program, or a thousand other questions neither of us even knows how to ask...'cause we just ain't tax experts. To be able to present this situation as alarming requires such an expert perspective, with actual comparative data: a whole helluva lot more than you'll find on rightie-sites.Aw, come on now, Bill. I'm starting to question my original assumptions about you as being a very reasonable and intelligent thinker. Did you look at the sources I posted? One of them was the actual report from the Treasury Inspector General, which was where the facts for the article I quoted were from. Are you going to tell me that the Treasury Inspector General is part of the "ring-wing extremist" group?
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:Average American? Hang on there, Pig...I'm simply stating my credentials as to my knowledge about such matters. Don't you dare try to make me a snob! My "mindset" is that of a pragmatist and a compromise finder. If that's now "dangerous", well...the more you talk, the more you prove my point about extremism and how it turns people off.You missed the point. I wasn't accusing you of being a snob. I was pointing out that it's dangerous to be on the side of trusting too much that you don't understand it, so you'll leave it to someone else.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:You simply have not presented sufficient evidence to prove how "exceptional" this instance is.Why does this have to be exceptional to be a problem? It's a current event. They are currently trying to extend this program, and without fixing it's problems. How is there anything wrong with showing the problem with a program that they want to spend more money on? How is it extreme to point out the fact that the Inspector General has now twice audited this program and found problems, which they haven't addressed, and it has now cost hundreds of millions of dollars in fraud?
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:This is what I am talking about. You keep getting hand-fed these tiny tidbits masquerading as alleged smoking guns. They polarize more than educate. I deem this current finding unsupportable by the minimal data presented.At the risk of repetition, are you seriously telling me that posting a government report that exposes fraud in a particular program, is a polarizing action? Are you seriously saying that this doesn't serve to educate people? And if you are going to lump this into my so-called Obama-bashing extremist posting, would you go back and read through this thread again and show me where I pointed out any particular person or group (other than the generic "government") as being responsible for this problem, and why they should be slammed for it? It's not there, save a small sarcastic reference to the person in charge of the IRS being a tax cheat. This was purely about the premise of creating these government programs to try and manipulate the economy, and especially the same part of the economy that has caused massive problems with previous manipulation.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:I trust no one too much, my good man. I fear I cannot say the same for you. I am definitely implying you may be putting too much trust into snippets being provided by policy-dogmatists.Again, you're focusing too much on what I do, rather than simply the subject of the thread. I read and research a ton, and only post about 10-20% of the info I find, because a lot of it can be written off as biased commentary. However a large portion of what I read is the actual direct info from government websites, and the actual text of bills when available.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:"Exceptional" would make the problem worthy of mentioning at all, much less debating. If it's not exceptional, if it can be explained as nothing out of the ordinary...Business as usual.See, this is aparently where you and I differ a lot. I have a very big problem with being able to dismiss hundreds of millions of dollars in fraud as simply "business as usual" and unworthly of discussion or outrage. Frankly, the fact that this is a common occurance is all the more reason to bring attention to it when it involves something being currently debated in Congress. People need to be telling their Senators and Representatives that they are sick of this being business as usual, and that the current item they are debating must be amended to require stricter reporting so as to close these gaps. Quite frankly, I don't see my life as too busy to know what the hell is going on in my government whenever possible, particularly when we are in a horrible recession and our government keeps writing bill after bill throwing money around that we don't have.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:It did not come from objective, independent research.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:But indulge me. How was your attention called to this particular report?It was an article in the Washington Post. I found it while clicking through their website as I do on a regular basis. Once I read the article, I found the actual report that had been filed by the Inspector General, which I included in my first post. I ask you again, did you actually click the links and see what they were, or did you make the assumption that I simply posted a couple of right-wing articles as my sources?
Greedy Capitalist Pig wrote:sndsgood wrote:people lie and cheat on their taxes every year. hopefully they can catch most of them and give them a nice big penelaty.While this is true, I have two things to say about it:
1) Why keep creating things like this which just open the door to more cheating?
2) They are trying to extend this program, and are currently unwilling to force the IRS to verify eligibility, so it's just paving the way for continued abuse.
Greedy Capitalist Pig wrote:And if you are going to lump this into my so-called Obama-bashing extremist posting, would you go back and read through this thread again and show me where I pointed out any particular person or group (other than the generic "government") as being responsible for this problem, and why they should be slammed for it?
Bill Hahn wrote:After perusing this Washington Right...I mean Post, article again, I was entertained by two facts:Sorry Bill, but you just showed that you haven't really been reading what I posted with any kind of open mind. You have made an assumption about my point, and your mind tried to fit my words into that preconception. I have not said anywhere in this thread anything about Obama or the Democrats. I spoke about the bill, and the facts.
1. This Tax Credit Act enjoys bipartisan support on Capital Hill, so Republicans are partially responsible for its perpetuation. Kind of blows the steam out of disparaging the current Democratic-majority government for it.
2. The Act was initiated in April of 2008...yes, during the Bush administration. As such, it becomes an even less effective tool to cast derision at the current administration and Congress. In closing, the article even notes: The Obama administration has not taken a position on extending the tax credit.