CONSUMER ALERT
MIKE COX
ATTORNEY GENERAL
The Attorney General provides Consumer
Alerts to inform the public of unfair, misleading, or deceptive business
practices, and to provide information and guidance on other issues of concern.
Consumer alerts are not legal advice, legal authority, or a binding legal
opinion from the Department of Attorney General.
IRS SCAMS
IRS Will Never Ask for Taxpayers' Personal Information
by Phone or in E-mails
Anybody contacting you claiming
to be from the IRS and asking you for personal identifying information is a
crook. Every year the IRS issues warnings about rebate or other scams being
perpetrated by con artists claiming to work for the agency. This year, with
unemployment at records highs and the passage of a federal stimulus plan, crooks
have yet another opportunity to trick people eager for help into revealing
personal identifying information.
The goal of these crooks is to commit identity theft, take control of personal
computers, or simply duping people out of cash. IRS scams enable con artists to
get bank account information, Social Security numbers, or credit and debit card
details that are then used to commit identity theft.
IRS E-MAIL SCAMS
E-mail continues to be the
method of choice for IRS scams. Common e-mail tricks used by these crooks
include using:
Don't fall for any e-mail
scams! The IRS never initiates e-mails to taxpayers!
Refund E-mail. Several
variations of this bogus e-mail exist, all falsely claiming to come from the IRS
and informing the recipient to click on a link to access a refund claim form
that requires personal identifying information. The crooks try to make this
look legitimate by using a specific refund sum that sounds convincing (reported
Michigan variations include $134.80 and $184.80). A recent new twist is aimed
at tax-exempt organizations and includes the name and a fake signature of an
actual IRS employee.
The "Where's My Refund?"
variation of this bogus e-mail offers track your refund and asks for your last
name, Social Security Number, and credit card information.
Audit E-mail. This
bogus e-mail informs the recipient that his or her tax return will be audited.
As if the threat of an audit was not enough to get someone's attention, the
e-mail may include a greeting in the body addressed to the specific recipient by
name.
Tax Law Changes E-mail.
Directed at accountants and businesses, this bogus e-mail invites the recipient
to download information on tax law changes. Clicking on the link downloads
malware. Malware is short for malicious software and describes
software designed to infiltrate or damage a computer system without the owner's
informed consent. Malware can take over the victim's computer hard
drive, giving someone remote access to the computer, or it could look for or
record passwords or other information and send that valuable personal
identifying information to the crook.
Cash Reward for Completing
Online Customer Satisfaction Survey. This e-mail purports to pay taxpayers
for completing an online survey that, of course, includes questions asking for
personal identifying information.
IRS PHONE SCAMS
Rebate Phone Call.
Aimed at seniors, the caller identifies himself as an IRS employee and tells the
targeted victim that he is eligible for a sizable rebate for filing taxes
early. The fake IRS employee states that he needs the target's bank account
information for direct deposit of the rebate.
Paper Check Phone Call.
In this telephone scam, a fake IRS employee indicates the IRS sent a check that
has not been cashed and the IRS needs to verify the individual's bank account
number. The only way the IRS collects your bank account details is if you
choose to put them in your tax return.
WHAT TO DO IF YOU GET AN
E-MAIL OR PHONE CALL PURPORTING TO COME FROM THE IRS
If you know the e-mail or call
purports to be from the IRS, don't open the e-mail or answer the phone. You may
forward e-mails to
phishing@irs.gov, the address established by the IRS to receive, track, and
shut down these scams. Detailed instructions for how to send the e-mails are in
the IRS's publication "How to Protect Yourself from Suspicious E-Mails or
Phishing Schemes" available at:
http://www.irs.gov/individuals/article/0,,id=155344,00.html
You may not receive an
individual response to your e-mail because of the volume of reports the IRS
receives each day.
You may also report misuse of
the IRS name, logo, forms, or other IRS property to the Treasury Inspector
General for Tax Administration toll-free at 1-800-366-4484.
Also remember that the only
genuine IRS website is
www.irs.gov. You should never get to this site using a link embedded into
an e-mail, instead enter the address in your browser. A website embedded into
an e-mail can easily take you to a fake site.
BEWARE OF ADVANCE REFUND
LOANS
An advance refund loan is a
loan based on money you are expecting to get as a tax refund. These loans can
be legitimate but lenders charge huge rates of interest and fees. Sending your
return in on time will sometimes get your money is just a few weeks, without a
hefty price.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Consumers may
contact the Attorney General's Consumer Protection Division at:
Consumer Protection Division
P.O. Box 30213
Lansing, MI 48909
517-373-1140
Fax: 517-241-3771
Toll free: 877-765-8388
www.michigan.gov/ag (online complaint
form)