TP received a letter from the IRS after his e-filing. The IRS letter had Estonia prepaid postage and was dated October 21, 2019. Is this a real IRS letter from Estonia? Let me give you some facts as follows:
1. TP resided overseas and printed his foreign address on page 1 of his 2018 Form 1040.
2. As per PTO, TP’s return was accepted by the agency on October 4, 2019.
3. TP is expecting a refund from his filing of Form 1040 (less than $2,000 refund).
4. The upper right hand corner of the letter from the IRS had letter number, letter date and tax period.
5. The IRS letter is requesting the following information:
a) A copy of pages 1 and 2 of the return,
b) Amounts and dates of all estimated tax payments paid this year,
c) Any supporting documents verifying income or withholding,
d) A copy of the IRS letter itself.
e) All the requested information should be mailed to Internal Revenue Service, Austin Submission Processing Campus, 3651 S IH 35, Austin, TX 78741, Mail Stop 6126 AUSC.
f) TP’s contact number and hours he can be reached.
As I never receive a letter from IRS with a prepaid Estonia stamp, I just want to make sure this is legitimate. Item being requested such as page 2 of 2018 Form 1040 is not in existence. They should have a complete copy of Form 1040 but requested pages 1 and 2 of the return. Can I have any of your comment? Thanks a lot.
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I pulled up Pub 1546. It might be a resource to help you resolve if there is fraud or not. Also, they list this info:
Texas (Austin) 3651 S. Interregional Highway 35 Stop 1005 AUSC Austin, TX 78741 Phone: 512-460-8300 FAX: 855-204-5023
I pulled up Pub 1546. It might be a resource to help you resolve if there is fraud or not. Also, they list this info:
Texas (Austin) 3651 S. Interregional Highway 35 Stop 1005 AUSC Austin, TX 78741 Phone: 512-460-8300 FAX: 855-204-5023
It doesn't smell right. Some question you may ask yourself...
There is probably a phone number they suggest the taxpayer to call for questions. It is most likely not an IRS number if you check (although it may look like one with a digit changed or numbers transposed). They are probably hoping the taxpayer, knowing he/she is overseas, would call rather than correspond by mail so that they could extract information from him/her during the call.
I'd call the PPS to check that out, provided you are a third party designee or have a PoA. Even if it's real, I wouldn't submit anything without first verifying the authenticity of the notice with the IRS.
If the notice turns out to be a scam but they have your client's mailing address, know that they filed an international return, and the SSN (whether or not truncated) is correct, your client should check his/her credit report, etc., and take the necessary actions as his/her personal data may have been breached.
"... Item being requested such as page 2 of 2018 Form 1040 is not in existence."
Actually the official F 1040 does has page one & two (on that infamous postcard).
"We" browbeat Intuit into at least allowing the option of printing it all on just one page.
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