Client Relationships Majority of CPAs Polled had Clients Victimized by Tax ID Theft Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) Written by Paul Bonner, Journal of Accountancy Modified Oct 17, 2017 3 min read Sixty-three percent of CPAs who answered the 2015 tax software survey conducted by The Tax Adviser and Journal of Accountancy said at least one of their clients was a victim of tax identity theft in the 2015 filing season. CPAs interviewed in connection with the survey’s findings on identity theft also echoed National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson’s report to Congress released Wednesday detailing long telephone wait times and other frustrations experienced by victims of identity theft in dealing with the IRS (Objectives Report to Congress). In the survey, conducted in May, most CPAs reporting theft of clients’ IDs said the problem affected fewer than 5 percent of their clients, although 76 respondents (2 percent) said between 6 percent and 10 percent of their clients were victims. Ten respondents reported between 11 percent and 15 percent of their clients were victims, and two respondents put the percentage at more than 15 percent. Many respondents had some difficulty dealing with the IRS in resolving the issues, with only 27 percent saying it was easy or very easy to resolve, and 39 percent saying it was difficult or very difficult. A significant percentage of respondents, 44 percent, reported that the victims were unaware of the theft before attempting to file their 2014 returns, and another 42 percent said some victims were aware of it and others were not. More results, including CPAs’ assessment of the major software products they used to prepare individual and business returns, will be available in the August issue of The Tax Adviser and the September issue of the Journal of Accountancy. In her mid-year report to Congress (see previous coverage), Olson found fault with the IRS’s low level of telephone service to ID theft victims and other taxpayers this year and its continuing refusal to assign a single IRS employee to each victim as an ongoing contact and to oversee resolution of the case. For three weeks in late February and early March, the percentage of callers getting through to an IRS employee on a Taxpayer Protection Program phone line was 10 percent or less. Callers who did get through had been on hold for an average of an hour during one week in early February. Callers to the Taxpayer Protection Program line were those whose returns were suspended from processing for suspected ID theft; Olson also reported that more than one-third of the more than 1.5 million returns suspended turned out to be legitimate. Respondents to The Tax Adviser and Journal of Accountancy software survey said even more challenging than dealing with the IRS on behalf of their clients who were victimized was fielding those clients’ concerns, including complaints about the IRS’s level of service. “They relayed stories to me of long telephone delays in getting any information,” said Mike Kimmell, a director at Mauldin & Jenkins LLC in Atlanta. Clients in some cases did not receive identity protection personal identification numbers (IP PINs) promised by IRS personnel or experienced a lack of responsiveness in other ways. “All this sounds normal to practitioners, but it is unnerving to the taxpayers,” Kimmell said. Because the IRS does not assign a single employee to resolve each victim’s case, taxpayers must call the Service repeatedly to discuss different aspects of it, each time having to explain their plight anew to a different employee, Olson said in her report to Congress. As a result, victims “often feel like they are victimized a second time by the IRS’s processes,” she said. That was how it seemed to clients of Lori Marrs, with Marrs Bergquist, CPAs, in Las Vegas. “The issue was not created by them, and yet they felt that the IRS treated them as though they had done something wrong,” Marrs said. Taxpayer identity theft affects clients and practitioners Sixty-three percent of tax practitioner respondents had clients who were victims of identity theft this year, a recent survey by The Tax Adviser and Journal of Accountancy reveals. Next Post Above the Forms: Preventing Tax-Related Identity Theft Written by Paul Bonner, Journal of Accountancy Paul Bonner is a JofA senior editor. 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