[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 114 (Monday, July 9, 2018)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4844-S4845]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Ms. COLLINS (for herself and Mr. Jones):
S. 3186. A bill to require the Internal Revenue Service to establish,
incrementally over five years, a nationwide program to provide personal
identification numbers to taxpayers to help prevent tax-related
identity theft; to the Committee on Finance.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr President, I am pleased to introduce with my
colleague from Alabama, Senator Jones, the Taxpayer Identity Protection
Act of 2018, a bill that seeks to help prevent American taxpayers and
seniors from falling victim to identity theft and tax refund fraud.
As of May 17, the IRS had received more than 141.5 million individual
income tax returns for the 2018 filing season. Of that number, nearly
75 percent were eligible for refunds. These refunds are not a gift from
the Federal government--they are the return of funds belonging to
taxpayers that were over-withheld from their paychecks last year. In
the past few months, millions of American families have been eagerly
awaiting these tax refunds, money they may need to pay off debts,
medical bills, and plug gaps in the family budget. Unfortunately, for
many Americans these refunds have not yet come.
Taxpayers are not the only ones eagerly awaiting these refunds.
Criminals have figured out that, in many instances, it is cheaper and
easier for them to steal taxpayers' identities and hijack their tax
refunds than it is to traffic in drugs or rob banks.
Identity theft-refund fraud occurs when a criminal files a false tax
return using a stolen Social Security Number and other sensitive
personal information from sources like hospitals, schools, or assisted
living facilities, often by recruiting employees to steal that
information. The fraudster then uses this information to prepare
fraudulent tax returns.
The thieves make sure to file early, as soon as the tax filing season
opens in January, to increase the odds that they can get a refund
before the real taxpayer files his or her return. The criminals are
known to hold what they call ``make it rain parties,'' where they bring
stolen laptops to a motel room with Internet access, and work together
churning-out scores of fake returns.
These fraudsters work under the premise of ``file early, file
often.'' Once the thieves file the fraudulent tax return, the IRS
processes it and issues a refund. With each refund worth on average
$2,778, the money can add up quickly.
This is not a victimless crime. Last year, the Federal Trade
Commission received more than 371,000 complaints of identity theft,
including 82,000 complaints related to employment or tax-refund fraud.
Taxpayers who have their refunds hijacked by fraudsters often have to
wait years to get the refunds to which they are legally entitled. Many
are re-victimized year after year. A substantial number become victims
of other forms of identity theft. Worst of all, victims are often the
most vulnerable: elderly citizens who earn so little they are not even
required to file a tax return. The IG estimates that 76,000 low-income
elderly citizens were victims of tax-fraud identity theft in 2010
alone.
In 2016, the Lewiston Sun Journal published a story about a couple,
Rick Zaccaro and his wife, Bonnie Washuk, who were victims of tax
refund fraud. They had filed their taxes in late January 2015, and when
Rick, a retired financial analyst for the Postal Service, was checking
the status of their return online in early February, he learned that
they were the victims of identity theft. Someone had filed and claimed
a tax refund using their names, dates of birth, and Social Security
Numbers. That claim was paid while their legitimate tax filing, with
their appropriate W2s, was in limbo. It took months of worrying, frozen
bank accounts, and a lot of calls to multiple government offices for
them to try and straighten things out. When they did finally receive
their refund, they also received something called an Identity
Protection Personal Identification Number--better known as an IP PIN.
To provide relief to some victims of identity theft, the IRS began
issuing IP PINs to eligible taxpayers in fiscal year 2011. An IP PIN is
a six-digit number assigned to eligible taxpayers that allows their tax
returns and refunds to be processed without delay and helps prevent the
misuse of their Social Security Numbers on fraudulent income tax
returns. If a return is e-filed with their Social Security Number and
an incorrect or missing IP PIN, the IRS's system automatically rejects
the tax return until it is submitted with the correct IP PIN or they
file on paper. If the same conditions occur on a paper-filed return,
the IRS will delay its processing and any refund that may be due while
the IRS determines if the return actually belongs to the taxpayer.
In addition to victims of identity theft, in 2013, the IRS began a
pilot
[[Page S4845]]
program in which it offered IP PINs to all taxpayers, not just those
who were victims of identity theft, who filed their federal tax returns
as residents of Florida, Georgia, or the District of Columbia.
According to the IRS, these three locations have the highest per-capita
percentage of tax-related identity theft in the country. Taxpayers in
these three jurisdictions are not required to use an IP PIN but may
opt-in to the program if they want the extra layer of identity
protection.
In preparation for the 2018 Filing Season, the IRS issued nearly 3.5
million IP PINs to taxpayers, up from 770,000 in 2013. According to the
IRS, as of February 28, 2018, it had rejected approximately 7,376
fraudulent e-filed tax returns, and as of March 15, 2018, it had
stopped 1,442 paper-filed tax returns from posting to the Master File.
The Taxpayer Identity Protection Act of 2018 would expand and make
permanent the IRS's IP PIN pilot program to help combat identity theft
refund fraud across the nation. Specifically, our bill would authorize
the IRS to incrementally expand its pilot program nationally, in
phases, over a five-year period. Scaling out the program would give all
taxpayers the opportunity to further protect themselves from falling
victim to tax refund fraud and identity theft, while also saving
taxpayers billions of dollars every year. The IP PIN pilot program has
worked to protect against identity theft and the IRS supports its
expansion over the next five-years. I urge my colleagues on both sides
of the aisle to support the adoption of Taxpayer Identity Protection
Act of 2018.
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