Byzantine Tax Laws Threaten To Make Us All Tax Cheats
The Department of Justice is suing several tax preparers for filing fraudulent returns, but even honest filers risk running afoul of tax laws.

Each year, Americans prepare for tax season by scrounging up any spare receipt that might qualify them for a marginal credit or deduction. Sometimes people misrepresent their actual tax obligations in order to qualify for a lower tax bill or a higher refund. They might do this either accidentally or on purpose—but due to the complexity of the tax code the difference between the two can be quite murky.
This month the Department of Justice has announced law enforcement actions in at least six different cases involving tax preparers.
One case is a civil complaint against six people working for the Michigan tax-prep company Equitax. The complaint alleges that the defendants "knowingly took unreasonable or incorrect positions on tax returns they prepared" in order to artificially lower customers' tax obligations, resulting in a "significant loss in tax revenue, estimated at over $2 million for the 2021 tax year alone."
In another case, prosecutors allege that the operator of a Houston business called Taxes R Us "knowingly underreported the tax her customers owed," generating refunds that were collectively inflated by $1 million or more. And a judge just sentenced a Mississippi man to more than five years in prison after a jury found that he, along with others, cost the IRS over $3.5 million in lost tax revenue "by reporting false education credits, itemized deductions and business profits or losses on their clients' tax returns."
These cases join several more, including a Florida woman who allegedly deprived the government of more than $6 million since 2021 by understating her clients' tax liabilities, a Chicago man accused of inflating customers' refunds by reporting business losses that did not occur, and a Dallas woman found to have fraudulently secured her clients over $3 million in refunds.
Prosecutors bring charges in cases like these on the basis that the defendants' actions cause collective harm. "Those who prepare and file fraudulent returns cheat all honest taxpayers," said U.S. Attorney Erek Barron after a Maryland man was sentenced to more than two years in federal prison for filing fraudulent returns, resulting in over $325,000 in erroneous refunds.
But the complexity of the American tax code is what allows shady tax preparers to operate in the first place—and that same complexity poses a risk to the rest of us as well.
"If you look at the average IRS form, I mean, it looks like advanced calculus," says Patrick Hedger, executive director of the Taxpayers Protection Alliance. "These forms aren't clear," he says. "That created the need for private sector companies to fill the gap and help people prepare their taxes….And even the people that are doing it professionally are making mistakes."
It's quite possible that each of the defendants mentioned above did knowingly misrepresent clients' tax obligations, in violation of federal law. But even with the best of intentions, tax preparers—and taxpayers filing their own returns—risk running afoul of the overly complex tax code or the IRS's rules.
"When Congress creates carve-outs, it generally tasks the IRS with defining what qualifies," Hedger tells Reason. "And so the IRS, through rule changes and regulatory guidance, can have a lot of discretion in terms of deciding what qualifies or what doesn't, for various deductions and credits. There is a difference between what the law may sound like and what the IRS decides does or does not qualify."
This disconnect exists even within the IRS itself: In 1989, the IRS admitted that when filers called with questions, the agency gave wrong answers more than 30 percent of the time. In the time since, the tax code has only gotten more complicated—the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that during the 2021 tax filing season, the IRS "suspended and reviewed 35 million returns with errors." This could be the result of mistakes by filers, but it could also be the result of mistakes made by IRS agents. The GAO noted that the IRS "does not have a process to identify and analyze their underlying causes."
Such a voluminous system of tax laws, with byzantine reporting requirements, allows cheats to use that complexity to their advantage. In each case listed above, fraudulent tax preparers allegedly claimed deductions and credits their clients did not qualify for.
That same complexity can make it nearly impossible for the average taxpayer to safely and confidently file a return without enlisting the help of outside experts, at significant overall expense: Taxpayers spend more than $100 billion per year in out-of-pocket expenses related to filing, as well as an estimated $260 billion per year in lost time spent complying with tax law, according to the National Taxpayers Union Foundation.
Each of the Justice Department's cases against tax preparers may be legally sound, and each defendant may have knowingly committed fraud. But the complexity of the tax code threatens to make tax cheats of us all.
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As long as the DOJ only goes after Republicans, this is well deserved.
Mercantilist looters increased tariffs to the point that Dems went to war to try to dissolve the Customs Union. Dems in 1894 demanded a communist manifesto income tax to gradually replace tariffs altogether. Tariff collectors come after shipping companies (and rum-runners), but do not kick doors and shoot ordinary individual citizens or rob them in a star chamber. Like other marxista proposals, the income tax is worse than--and was added to--America's 10% for-revenue tariff laws and their protective terato-offspring.
Has anyone here noticed that Republicans Long Dong, Palito, Mutterkreus, Gorbasuch and KKKavanaugh are dragging the nation backward to ban birth control pills (like in 1960)? What's next? Bring back Comstock-law chain-gang penalties for mail-order rubbers?
Nothin but girl bulliers all the way down.
I bullied some chicks just this morning.
No mean tweets though.
Would it be possible to discover (and post) the lobbying expenses of Intuit?
https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2024/02/turbotax-maker-intuit-spent-millions-in-record-lobbying-blitz-amid-threats-to-tax-prep-industry/
When Turbo-tax first came out, their warez checked YES to the Nixon Anti-Libertarian Law subsidies checkoff! That's the square that says killing the LP by subsidizing entrenched looters WON'T raise your taxes. Excel and Open Office calc do the job without feeding looters.
Hint: You could fund a small nation with it. Throw in Chuck Schwab, H&R Block, and the rest ... you could fund several Euro nations in a bloc with it.
The GAO noted that the IRS "does not have a process to identify and analyze their [filing mistakes] underlying causes."
Here's a suggested process. Gather all the information a random (anonymized) taxpayer would use to submit xir taxes. Select a random congresscreature and a random IRS employee. Give those two people twenty-four hours to separately complete the taxpayer's filing. Compare the two submittals, and if the bottom lines are not *exactly* the same, fire both "preparers". Repeat daily until the underlying causes are identified, analyzed, and *fixed*.
I like your solution. haha
And by fire I assume you are using that word literally.
Speaking of tax cheats Donnie's hush money trial is now scheduled for April 15.
Good . You are working to get him elected. Nice work. Nice political witch hunt.
Yep, when ever they try to strike him down he becomes more powerful than ever.
Is that the trial where he is guilty of using campaign funds to pay off Spermy and then guilty of not using those same funds but personal funds to pay her to keep her mouth shut but with an NDA?
Want to be sure which 'crime' you are promoting here.
Or is there some new evidence. Such as the release of some penis pictures. You seem to enjoy those too.
this is one of those things where everyone should not do the thing and make them enforce it
Just for simplicity sake, we should keep the 2017 tax reform legislation in place. Having a larger standard deduction helps the lowest income people the most.
Itemizing is an upper middle class and upper class game. There are CPAs for that. Keep the current code in place, and do not revert back to the old Obama tax scheme.
Tax Laws Threaten To Make Us All Tax Cheats
Feature, not a bug.
87,000 new IRS agents gonna need somethin' to do.
Imagine if all that human ingenuity were spent on tackling diseases. Or creating new technologies.
Just a reminder: We wouldn't need any of these Byzantine tax laws if we had a national sales tax.
Just a rejoinder: sales taxes hide the amount of the tax, and are way too easy to increase.
I am one of the old farts that think you should have to pay the sales tax (and gas tax) with a separate transaction to emphasize the tax amount.
Get off my lawn! 🙂 = I am one of the old farts that think you should have to pay the sales tax (and gas tax) with a separate transaction to emphasize the tax amount.
Do you get to write off your sales tax? I do in Texas.
As for gas tax, can't wait for the all the EVs on the road that don't pay it.
In my state you pay a much higher fee to register an EV to account for lost gas tax revenue.
In my state they added a $75 fee for ‘charging infrastructure’. Even for hybrids that do not have external charging capabilities.
My state is also eliminating the bar exam to become an attorney, because bar exams are too hard for minorities.
https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2024/mar/15/supreme-court-bar-exam-will-no-longer-be-required-/
FTA:
“The Bar Licensure Task Force found that the traditional exam “disproportionally and unnecessarily blocks” marginalized groups from becoming practicing attorneys and is “at best minimally effective” for ensuring competency, according to a news release from the Washington Administrative Office of the Courts.”
How about just a, "This is what I feel, I owe" tax. Since feelz are all the rage, I say lean into it.
We had neither of those bad apples when "we" had a revenue-only tariff. That worked fine until 1861, AFTER Lincoln was elected, but 2 days BEFORE his inauguration when the tariff was hiked. Customs regulations were changed by Hayes to stop smuggling of opium and Chinamen from Canada in railcars just days before Cleveland took office. The Jones five-and-ten law making beer a felony was signed by Coolidge two days before Herbert Hoover was inaugurated in 1929. There is a visible pattern to some of these sequences of events.
A sales tax is just as bad as an income tax, since both require a police surveillance state and a complete abandonment of the Fourth Amendment. Tying taxation to a volume of income OR spending will allow the government to spy on all of us without a warrant and will allow the government to make criminals out of us at any time it wants to.
You don't accidentally deduct $20,000 in charitable donations you didn't actually make - yes, I've seen a return like that and asked the taxpayer (a friend) if they actually made contributions equal to 33% of their gross income; they feigned ignorance. Likewise, claiming credits for non-existent children, or employees, or creditable expenses for that matter, is a bit different from making an error or taking an unreasonable position.
You can't conflate errors with deliberate misstatements. Even when one takes a position that is not settled law they should understand why and how they are exposed. I'd say most tax preparers are aware of that, and if yours isn't, you should consider an alternative.
If your return is a W-2, a 1099, and a 1098 you shouldn't be fucking it up. If you're going to take questionable positions on returns with more complexity you should know what you're risking. After all, the author is correct that the tax code is a byzantine mess - and that's not changing any time soon.
Funny how 13A purports to end involuntary servitude. But 16A demands we slave over tax returns under fear of duress. You can hire some accountant to do some of the work in your stead, but it's your home and car they take, NOT the accountant's. When Rockefeller got around the draft by hiring a kid to get shot Saving the Customs Union, it was the kid that assumed all liability.
All of that pales in comparison to the Comstock Act.
A modest proposal:
Line one - enter your income for the tax year
Line two - enter amount withheld
Line three - subtract line two from line one, and pay that amount
Tax consumption, not income.
Reread. His **A modest proposal** is a 100% tax.
There is no doubt that the tax code is far too complex. It is also true that Congress sets broad goals lets the IRS figure out how to apply the law through rules. Congress washes its hands of the unpleasant task but reserve the right to criticize the IRS about how it applies the law. All this ends with a code so complex people go to tax software or tax preparers to figure their taxes. Part of the problem is that the software and common preparers are not equipped for anything more complex than the standard 1040. People really need a CPA or tax lawyer for anything more complicated. I do my own taxes which are not much more complicated that capital gains on Schedule D. I have over the years gotten questions from family and friends about tax issues the software or preparers cannot handle. So, I don’t find it surprising that people using tax preparers or the preparer themselves find themselves in court.
I would add that if you think the Federal Income Tax is complex you should try preparing the Wisconsin Income tax.
Thanks for the paragraph of contradictions.
I'm just commenting thank Congress for the tax code.
You are an idiot. The point is that when it comes to government, the process is the punishment.
Snappy response, no idea what you are talking about, but definitely snappy.
No comment Joe on you know, you can be an illegal immigrant and kills someone, or riot...oops peaceful protest, or be a democrat in congress - that is all fine.
But if you don't pay your taxes, it's jail for you. Property taxes, you lose your house. Government needs that sweet sweet green
Yep. As a wise man once observed: If you want to see the full force of government, just stop paying your taxes.
It's simple... The IRS wants all of it, every last cent. When you have nothing left at all, they just might be satisfied, but probably not. Just wait until the IRS starts using flawed AI algorithms to steal even faster.
Pre-Crime is rapidly becoming a reality.
Wouldn’t be a problem in a fair system where every citizen got the exact same bill of their ‘share’ of funding the government.
And for all those UN-Constitutional things; let those who voted for its implementation pay those bills alone.
Then watch as the USA gets saved from the [Na]tional So[zi]alist nightmare practically overnight ... because once the complexity of masterminded-theft tactics ends so does the criminal governing ideology.
Facing the reality of modern day taxes ... It's nothing but the EOY wealth distribution process of socialist America.
Lancaster is missing the point, as usual. The longer the government performs a service, the more inefficient they become and they are invariably inept at what they do manage to accomplish. So the DEA goes after doctors and the IRS goes after tax preparers to get them to police their customers. I wouldn't hold out hope that the AICPA is any less cowardly than the AMA. The government supports their cartels.
So the Feds tossed a few tax preparers in penitentiaries for nickel and dime rounding errors compared to the spending of the behemoth national police state. Their intentions were good. Right Joe? RIGHT JOE?
How does this reconcile with Bukele's speech that tax collection is only a ritual, since the US government is funded by debt and artificially created money rather than by taxes?
"IRS introduces new service industry tip reporting program" (Feb 2023)
So the IRS will be going after small employers who fail to “Keep [and report] a daily tip record using Form 4070A, Employee’s Daily Record of Tips” and/or fail to “Report all tips on an individual income tax return, Form 4137, Social Security and Medicare Tax on Unreported Tip Income”. Wait staff earning cash tips cheat on their taxes to the tune of about $20-30B each year, and the IRS has been unhappy with their ability to go after these people due to lack of resources. 87,000 new agents will certainly give them some new resources.
I'm looking forward to seeing waitresses dragged from their places of employment by armed agents for failing to pay taxes on her cash tips. I hope they show on CNN the artist selling caricatures on the boardwalk for $20 cash get hauled away. Holding my breath until I can see the super-couponers who arbitrage their wares on Ebay get their doors kicked in. When the illegal aliens file their fraudulent EITC claims, I hope they are arrested and put under the jail for a few years before they get deported. When small business owners or anyone else cheat on their taxes, they cheat us all, so going after them full-bore is a positive action. If, somehow, they also manage to find some millionaires and billionaires who actually cheated on their taxes, why, that's a huge bonus too!
I never would have thought waitresses, sidewalk artists, couponers and all the rest made over $400,000.00 per year.
Other Reason articles pointed out that the claim that the new IRS agents were to go after those making over $400K was a blatant lie. The rich hire the best accountants to write bulletproof returns - and the only reason a good accountant will work for the IRS is to get the experience to go work for the rich against the IRS at ten times the pay. Auditing them is a net loss of money, catching a small number of liars at a huge cost to the government in auditor's salaries.
The audits that might actually pay off are against low-income workers who could only afford a seasonal H&R Block worker with no expertise in tax laws. Besides tips, the best areas to find underpaid taxes are the Earned Income Credit, and children claimed more than once as dependents.
In light of the 87,000 new agents...saw a video of IRS armed agent training. Of course it's a training scenario, but that's entirely the point.
There's a saying (many variants) "The way you practice is the way you will play."
We've been told by Pres. Biden that the 87,000 new IRS agents will be sent after billionaires not paying their "fair share" (still no one has ever provided a definition for "fair share" that would apply to everyone in concrete terms--the usual mishmash received boils down to "I'd like to pay less, but other people should pay more".)
But the agents in the field are actually being trained to go after small businessmen who improperly deducted a work vehicle? Or, more specifically, as the video explains "Could not provide a source for the money used to purchase the vehicle". If that's what they're being trained for, that's what they are expected to be doing.
See, they weren't being trained to approach a billionaire's megayacht and deal with the private security people and lawyers, but to SWAT a landscaper over his work truck deduction.
It's a fantasy to think that the new agents will be limited to targeting billionaires, or even millionaires. It's the same reason why all transactions (totaling) over $600 must be tracked and reported. People selling beanie babies on ebay will be reported to the IRS, and can expect to be audited. Those people are probably not millioniares or billionaires. Also, the $600 rules came with increased emphasis on unreported tip earnings.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for going after tax cheats big or small. The EITC program is one glaring example of an area where enforcement should be better. Where the government *knows* that about 25% of all EITC payments are made incorrectly, either through "honest" errors or through outright fraud cost about $20B each year. And that's down markedly from about 1/3 of all such claims being wrongfully paid after the IRS began requiring an SSN for each child claimed (a rule that was branded "racist" when it was originally put in place). And if a single mom who works a double shift at some diner doesn't think to report her cash tips to the IRS, well, she should know better and will deserve it when the armed agents kick in her door.
I also am pretty sure that millionaires and billionaires have lawyers and tax specialists employed to make sure that they employ every legal strategy available in order to reduce their tax bills to the minimum required by law (or as close to it as they can come), and that most of the time, auditing them just enriches the lawyers. But in those cases, another saying comes to bear "the process is the punishment", because I also believe that agents will 100% go after people that they know haven't done anything wrong.
The complexity of Byzantine tax laws indeed poses a significant challenge for taxpayers, often leading to unintentional errors or misunderstandings that can result in accusations of tax evasion. To navigate modern tax regulations effectively, staying updated on current laws and seeking professional advice are essential. Regarding business financing, securing a loan can be instrumental in business growth. Drawing from personal experience, I can recommend to follow the author's contributions on Bloggportalen. This can provide valuable insights into different financing options, credits, and strategies. Leveraging such platforms facilitates informed decision-making and fosters a supportive community for entrepreneurs navigating the complexities of business finance.
I would like to add that the complex tax code drives poorer taxpayers to predatory tax preparing company that may take advantage of their customers.
https://sites.uab.edu/humanrights/2019/03/01/predatory-preparers-exploitation-through-tax-returns/