The IRS "War On Expats
beautiful cuenca wrote:I am ready to give up my citizenship. They have caused so much stress in my life because of this. Put liens on my houses in the states how much more can they do to people.
If those liens are still in place, check with an attorney and your accountant before you renounce, to see if losing your U.S. citizenship would hinder your ability to get the liens lifted.
cccmedia in Quito
Forbes and politico.com have been following the scam and how to avoid it.聽 Google: irs tax phone scam...and the name of either publication.
One piece of their advice:聽 if you get a call that might be a scam or is supposedly the IRS threatening you with jail or property confiscation, hang up...or ask for their phone number.聽 One potential victim asked for a phone number to call back and discuss it further...and the scammer immediately hung up.
cccmedia in Quito
I deleted my response to some of the other half-baked responses on this thread, but be mindful people, some here who claim 'US citizenship' and million dollar tax penalties for unnamed tax offenses and unsupported allegations of IRS harassment, may not be providing you with the whole story.
Take a look at their user profiles.
Just sayin'.
cccmedia wrote:Although I doubt that Beautiful fell victim to a pretend taxman calling her in Cuenca (which the IRS does not do), the telephone tax scam is real and has been peaking during the past two tax seasons.聽 Collectively, it is the biggest tax scam ever, according to the Treasury Department inspector general for tax matters.
Forbes and politico.com have been following the scam and how to avoid it.聽 Google: irs tax phone scam...and the name of either publication.
One piece of their advice:聽 if you get a call that might be a scam or is supposedly the IRS threatening you with jail or property confiscation, hang up...or ask for their phone number.聽 One potential victim asked for a phone number to call back and discuss it further...and the scammer immediately hung up.
cccmedia in Quito
Of course the IRS will always mail you statements first, usually not call unless you requested a call.聽 Another thing to do is thank the scammer for the heads up, ask them to mail you the paperwork, tell them you will take care of it face to face at the local IRS office.

In related fraud news, the accountant who signed off on Bernie Madoff's $17 billion deal never audited it, just gave Bernie a pack of his letterhead and a signature stamp and Bernie did the rest.聽 He got no jail time, 250 hours of community service, no fines.聽 He had been very helpful to get Madoff, and he apologized profusely to his family, including his 91 year old father, his mother-in-law and everyone else, all of聽 whom had lost their life savings to Bernie
quito0819 wrote:Well, mugtech, if you are going to roll on somebody, always roll up.聽 And I am sure that heartfelt apology made everything better.聽 Was it made in court as part of his plea deal?
Was made in court, don't know if it was part of the deal, but he pleaded guilty in 2009, so he had a lot of time to get his moment in court right.聽 Needless to say he will not be working as a CPA, like a rolling stone "When you got nothin', you got nothin' to lose"聽 All he could give them was his sorrow.聽 Probably wind up selling used cars, at age 55 his financial future looks bleak.
suefrankdahl wrote:Scam...scam....scam....what a world
Anyone in the U.S. notice that almost everytime tv ads, or radio ads are on, there is now an ad from some company offering IRS advice, and guarenteeing to get you a deal for pennies on the dollar if you have overdue IRS debts? Wonder how legit they are? Kind of seems a bit suspicious.
Since Mugtech brought up Madoff in unrelated news. People should watch the American Greed series on CNBC. Madoff gets all the attention, but he's really just one of many. Probably 100's if not thousands more like him still running the same type of scam in the financial sector. Be wise, cautious, and paranoid about who you decide to invest with.

mugtech wrote:there are 12 banks with criminal charges pending who are NOT being offered any kind of deals.
US Banks? On Wall St? Just curious
suefrankdahl wrote:mugtech wrote:there are 12 banks with criminal charges pending who are NOT being offered any kind of deals.
US Banks? On Wall St? Just curious
Very funny
Swiss Banks
In other ongoing fraud news, the chief investigator for the IRS said there will be more criminal charges in the FIFA bribery case.聽 He said he does not know how many or when, but it takes a long time to take down international criminal organizations.聽 Seems the investigation started after the FBI started investigating the Russian mob and came across the FIFA dealings.
quito0819 wrote:Wonder if the are looking at Blatter?
He was defiant a few days ago, called it quits today.聽 What changed?
mugtech wrote:quito0819 wrote:Wonder if the are looking at Blatter?
He was defiant a few days ago, called it quits today.聽 What changed?
Have to imagine everyone is starting to rat everyone else out for some sort of plea type deal. Maybe Blatter already made a deal. Something like resign, give us names, and we will take it easy on you, and not leak out all the details of your corrupt dealings. Assuming he was part of the corruption. Which is pretty likely.
mugtech wrote:One wonders what it took to get the World Cup to Qatar?
Big numbers.
You sound skeptical Mugs. Am sure it was all legit, and on the up and up. I mean really, what are the chances an oil rich country would be passing out suitcases full of cash around?
j600rr wrote:mugtech wrote:One wonders what it took to get the World Cup to Qatar?
Big numbers.
You sound skeptical Mugs. Am sure it was all legit, and on the up and up. I mean really, what are the chances an oil rich country would be passing out suitcases full of cash around?
Absolutely, j600rr!聽 Anybody who knows anything at all about the game knows you can't beat the120 degree weather that Qatar enjoys.
On a lighter note, one of the defendants (from Trinidad) used an article in the Onion to prove that the US was out to take control of FIFA. - and did so on YouTube.

If you're referring to the 2020 America Report, it is akin to "news" reporting on the Faux News -- simply for entertainment and media histrionics. Rest assured - it just isn't true.
PS
1.聽 It's definitely frustrating trying to contact parties in the U.S. by overseas phone hookup.聽 That's a given.聽 Expecting it to be otherwise would be unrealistic.聽 This frustration-reality makes accomplishing things overseas take much longer.
Approach any calls you make to the U.S. about this with patience by preparing yourself mentally and emotionally.聽 It is likely this mess will not be cleared up quickly.聽 But there is no reason it can麓t be cleared up.
2. Appreciate the fact that you have made progress.聽 You now know, at least in general terms, how this screw-up occurred.聽 Have faith in the concept that you will get this completely cleared up, even though you may not see the way out at this moment.聽
3.聽 Obsessing over the fact that they won't give you the scammer's address is counter-productive.聽 Bringing the scammer to justice should not be your main concern right now.聽 You can most likely clear your alleged obligation without that.
If you switch point-of-view and look at this from the IRS perspective, of course they won't disclose the address.聽 They have lots of messed-up cases. They can麓t permit a headline writer to say "Scammer Attacked by Victim After IRS Gives Out Home Address."聽 It is likely that you might not be able to achieve anything productive anyway by having the address.
4.聽 If you had unlimited funds, you might be wise to hire a "good tax attorney" and his investigator at $400 an hour for the attorney, the P-I fees plus expenses.聽 But there may be pro bono victim advocates or other resources.聽 Put your energy into researching and networking for that.
5.聽 Take any reasonable steps the IRS lays out for you, as this may resolve the situation eventually.
6.聽 If you post again, consider helping us to guide you by telling us more about the house with the lien.聽 Do you want to sell it?聽 Is it vacant or tenanted?聽 Is there a property manager or someone looking after it?聽 Would you go back to the U.S. if necessary to deal with the house or related issues?聽 Is it draining your resources to the point where your capacity for patience is being exhausted?聽 Do you have a friend or relative in the U.S. who can assist you with some of this if necessary?
cccmedia in Quito
Back to the matter at hand, perhaps the lovely lady could setup a face-to-face meeting with the IRS? I know we can do this in Canada especially when the word "fraud" is in the picture. Regardless, the steps you are recommending are sound advice. You are a wise person!!! Bravo and thank God for good Samaritans like you.
Roberto- Canadian
Case in point.聽 I have had about 10 occasions when a taxpayer cashed in a cd, and since they were just getting their money back and had reported the interest earned, thought they were finished.聽 However, the holder of the cd reported to the IRS 100,000 in net proceeds which the taxpayer did not report.聽 The IRS assumed it was a 100,000 short term capital gain, taxed as ordinary income, and sent a bill for 25,000 in taxes plus penalties and interest.聽 We sent the IRS a letter saying it was a cashed cd, the taxpayer basis was 100,000, the tax return was correct as filed, please abate all taxes due, penalties and interest.聽 Within 90 days we received the IRS nevermind letter, case closed.
This is not to say the IRS is easy to deal with, they can be obtuse and not interested in your problem, especially if they figure you have been avoiding them since 2010.聽 The IRS will send you copies of all the tax returns filed using your SS#, that would be a start.聽 Since you were developing real estate projects I would hope that you kept all the paperwork and tax returns concerning said projects.
Good luck.
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