Crooks posing as Internal Revenue Service (IRS) officials are contacting people by phone in this area threatening to arrest them because they owe taxes. Officials warn not to be taken in by this scam.
One would be victim told WJLE Wednesday that he was contacted this week. This Smithville man and former public official, who asked not to be identified, said he was called early in the morning by a man purporting to be from the IRS. The man said agents were on their way to his home to take him into custody. The caller said his tax accountant had made a mistake and that he (would be victim) owed the IRS money which had not been paid. However the caller told the would be victim that he could go to the bank, get the money, and do a wire transfer to avoid arrest. The would be victim said the caller was very aggressive and intimidating in his threats which gave him cause for concern. But he sent no money.
The Treasury Inspector General for Taxpayer Administration (TIGTA) warns that in most cases the caller will demand a prepaid debit card, wire transfer or a credit card number for payment. If the person doesn’t comply, the caller will threaten to arrest the target, or take away their driver’s license or business.
Thousands of victims nationwide have lost money to these tax scam artists. But there are ways to recognize them and foil their attempts to steal your money.
These scammers often:
•call you. But when the IRS contacts people about unpaid taxes, they do it by postal mail, not by phone
•use common names and fake IRS badge numbers
•know the last four digits of your Social Security number
•demand payment via a prepaid debit card or wire transfer. The IRS doesn’t ask for either of these payment methods, nor will they ask for credit card numbers.
•rig caller ID information to appear as if the IRS really is calling
•send fake emails that look like legitimate IRS correspondence
•make a second call claiming to be the police or department of motor vehicles, rigging the caller ID information
To protect yourself from imposters who call, claiming to be from the IRS:
•don’t provide any account or other personal information. Hang up the phone.
•never wire money to a person or company you don’t know. Once you wire money, you can’t get it back.
•if you owe – or think you owe – federal taxes, call the IRS at 800-829-1040. IRS workers can help you with your payment questions. You also can visit the IRS website at irs.gov.
•if you’ve already paid your taxes, call and report the incident to TIGTA at 800-366-4484.
•forward emails from the IRS to phishing@irs.gov. Don’t open any attachments or click on any links in those emails.
•file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission at ftc.gov/complaint. Include “IRS Telephone Scam” in your complaint.