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	<title>Brumley&#039;s Blog &#187; Identity Theft</title>
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		<title>How to Avoid Identity Theft During Tax Season</title>
		<link>http://brumley.com/blog/2011/02/how-to-avoid-identity-theft-during-tax-season/?utm_source=rss&amp;utm_medium=rss&amp;utm_campaign=how-to-avoid-identity-theft-during-tax-season</link>
		<comments>http://brumley.com/blog/2011/02/how-to-avoid-identity-theft-during-tax-season/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Feb 2011 15:05:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>brumley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Credit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Identity Theft]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tax]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scams]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Scams involving the impersonation of the IRS usually take the form of e-mails, tweets, or other online messages to consumers. Scammers may also use phones and faxes to reach intended victims. Some scammers set up phony Web sites.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://brumley.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/scam1.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-766" title="scam1" src="http://brumley.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/scam1-300x224.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="224" /></a>Consumers  should protect themselves against online identity theft and other scams that  increase during and linger after the filing season. Such scams may appropriate  the name, logo, or other appurtenances of the IRS or U.S. Department of the  Treasury to mislead taxpayers into believing the communication is  legitimate.</p>
<p>Scams involving the impersonation of the IRS usually take the form of  e-mails, tweets, or other online messages to consumers. Scammers may also use  phones and faxes to reach intended victims. Some scammers set up phony Web  sites.</p>
<h3>The IRS and E-mail</h3>
<p>Generally, the IRS does not send unsolicited e-mails to taxpayers. Further,  the IRS does not discuss tax account information with taxpayers via e-mail or  use e-mail to solicit sensitive financial and personal information from  taxpayers. The IRS does not request financial account security information, such  as PIN numbers, from taxpayers.</p>
<h3>Object of Scams</h3>
<p>Most scams impersonating the IRS are identity theft schemes. In this type of  scam, the scammer poses as a legitimate institution to trick consumers into  revealing personal and financial information &#8211; such as passwords and Social  Security, PIN, bank account and credit card numbers &#8211; that can be used to gain  access to their bank, credit card, or other financial accounts.</p>
<p>Attempted identity theft scams that take place via e-mail are known as  phishing. Other scams may try to persuade a victim to advance sums of money in  the hope of realizing a larger gain. These are known as advance fee scams.</p>
<h3>How an Identity Theft Scam Works</h3>
<p>Most of the scams that impersonate the IRS are identity theft scams.  Typically, a consumer will receive an e-mail that claims to come from the IRS or  Treasury Department. The message will contain an enticing or intimidating  subject line, such as &#8220;Tax Refund,&#8221; &#8220;Inherited Funds,&#8221; or &#8220;IRS Notice.&#8221; Usually,  the message will state that the recipient needs to provide the IRS with  information to obtain the refund or avoid some penalty. The message will  instruct the consumer to open an attachment or click on a link in the e-mail.  This may lead to an official-looking IRS Web site. The look-alike site will then  contain a phony but genuine-looking online form or interactive application that  requires personal and financial information, which the scammer then uses to  commit identity theft.</p>
<p>Alternatively, the clicked link may secretly download malware to the  consumer&#8217;s computer. Malware is malicious code that can take over the computer&#8217;s  hard drive, giving the scammer remote access to the computer, or it could look  for passwords and other information and send them to the scammer.</p>
<h3>Phony Web or Commercial Sites</h3>
<p>In many IRS-impersonation scams, the scammer sends the consumer to a phony  Web site that mimics the appearance of the genuine IRS Web site, IRS.gov. This  allows the scammer to steer victims to phony interactive forms or applications  that appear genuine but require the targeted victim to enter personal and  financial information that will be used to commit identity theft.</p>
<p>The official Web site for the Internal Revenue Service is IRS.gov, and all  IRS.gov Web page addresses begin with http://www.irs.gov/.</p>
<p>In addition to Web sites established by scammers, there are commercial  Internet sites that often resemble the authentic IRS site or contain some form  of the IRS name in the address but end with a .com, .net, .org, or other  designation instead of .gov. These sites have no connection to the IRS.  Consumers may unknowingly visit these sites when searching the Internet to  retrieve tax forms, publications, and other information from the IRS.</p>
<h3>Frequent or Recent Scams</h3>
<p>There are a number of scams that impersonate the IRS. Some of them appear  with great frequency, particularly during and right after filing season, and  recur annually. Others are new.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Refund Scam:</strong> This is the most frequent IRS-impersonation  scam seen by the IRS. In this phishing scam, a bogus e-mail claiming to come  from the IRS tells the consumer that he or she is eligible to receive a tax  refund for a specified amount. It may use the phrase &#8220;last annual calculations  of your fiscal activity.&#8221; To claim the tax refund, the consumer must open an  attachment or click on a link contained in the e-mail to access and complete a  claim form. The form requires the entry of personal and financial information.  Several variations on the refund scam have claimed to come from the Exempt  Organizations area of the IRS or the name and signature of a genuine or made-up  IRS executive. In reality, taxpayers do not need to complete a special form to  obtain their federal tax refund. Refunds are triggered by the tax return they  submitted to the IRS.</li>
<li><strong>Lottery winnings or cash consignment: </strong>These advance fee  scam e-mails claim to come from the Treasury Department to notify recipients  that they&#8217;ll receive millions of dollars in recovered funds, lottery winnings,  or cash consignment if they provide certain personal information, including  phone numbers, via return e-mail. The e-mail may be just the first step in a  multistep scheme in which the victim is later contacted by telephone or further  e-mail and instructed to deposit taxes on the funds or winnings before they can  receive any of it. Alternatively, they may be sent a phony check of the funds or  winnings and told to deposit it but pay 10 percent in taxes or fees. Thinking  that the check must have cleared the bank and is genuine, some people comply.  However, the scammers, not the Treasury Department, will get the taxes or fees.  In reality, the Treasury Department does not become involved in notification of  inheritances or lottery or other winnings.</li>
<li><strong>Beneficial Owner Form:</strong> This fax-based phishing scam, which  generally targets foreign nationals, recurs periodically. It&#8217;s based on a  genuine IRS form, the W-8BEN, Certificate of Foreign Status of Beneficial Owner  for United States Tax Withholding. The scammer, though, invents his or her own  number and name for the form. The scammer modifies the form to request passport  numbers, information that is often used for account security purposes (such as  mother&#8217;s maiden name), and similar detailed personal and financial information,  and states that the recipient may have to pay additional tax if he or she fails  to immediately fax back the completed form. In reality, the real W-8BEN is  completed by banks, not individuals.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Other Known Scams</h3>
<p>The contents of other IRS-impersonation scams vary but may claim that the  recipient will be paid for participating in an online survey or is under  investigation or audit. Some scam e-mails have referenced Recovery-related tax  provisions, such as Making Work Pay, or solicited for charitable donations to  victims of natural disasters. Taxpayers should beware an e-mail scam that  references underreported income and the recipient&#8217;s &#8220;tax statement,&#8221; since  clicking on a link or opening an attachment is known to download malware onto  the recipient&#8217;s computer.</p>
<h3>How to Spot a Scam</h3>
<p>Many e-mail scams are fairly sophisticated and hard to detect. However, there  are signs to watch for, such as an e-mail that:</p>
<ul>
<li>requests detailed or an unusual amount of personal and/or financial  information, such as name, SSN, bank or credit card account numbers, or  security-related information, such as mother&#8217;s maiden name, either in the e-mail  itself or on another site to which a link in the e-mail sends the  recipient;</li>
<li>dangles bait to get the recipient to respond to the e-mail, such as  mentioning a tax refund or offering to pay the recipient to participate in an  IRS survey;</li>
<li>threatens a consequence for not responding to the e-mail, such as additional  taxes or blocking access to the recipient&#8217;s funds;</li>
<li>gets the Internal Revenue Service or other federal agency names wrong;</li>
<li>uses incorrect grammar or odd phrasing (many of the e-mail scams originate  overseas and are written by non-native English speakers);</li>
<li>uses a really long address in any link contained in the e-mail message or  one that does not start with the actual IRS Web site address  (http://www.irs.gov). The actual link&#8217;s address, or url, is revealed by moving  the mouse over the link included in the text of the e-mail.</li>
</ul>
<h3>What to Do</h3>
<p>Taxpayers who receive a suspicious e-mail claiming to come from the IRS  should take the following steps:</p>
<ul>
<li>Avoid opening any attachments to the e-mail, in case they contain malicious  code that will infect your computer.</li>
<li>Avoid clicking on any links, for the same reason. Alternatively, the links  may connect to a phony IRS Web site that appears authentic and then prompts for  personal identifiers, bank or credit card account numbers, or PINs.</li>
<li>Visit the IRS Web site, www.irs.gov, to use the &#8220;Where&#8217;s My Refund?&#8221;  interactive tool to determine if you are really getting a refund, rather than  responding to the e-mail message.</li>
<li>Forward the suspicious e-mail or url address to the IRS mailbox  phishing@irs.gov, and then delete the e-mail from your inbox.</li>
<li>Consumers who believe they are or may be victims of identity theft or other  scams may visit the U.S. Federal Trade Commission&#8217;s Web site for identity theft,  www.OnGuardOnline.gov, for guidance on what to do. The IRS is one of the  sponsors of this site.</li>
</ul>
<p>If you&#8217;ve received an email claiming to be from the IRS, call us to talk it  over before taking any action. We don&#8217;t want you to fall victim to a scam.</p>
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