IRS Audits Ain't What They Used To Be
by Matt Lewis, 1/12/2007
David Cay Johnston, ace tax reporter, has an excellent story in today's NYT on the norms at IRS concerning audits. To sum up, IRS auditors are more or less discouraged to do thorough audits, letting billions of dollars get away when it's right in front of them.
Top officials at the Internal Revenue Service are pushing agents to prematurely close audits of big companies with agreements to have them pay only a fraction of the additional taxes that could be collected, according to dozens of I.R.S. employees who say that the policy is costing the government billions of dollars a year.
“It’s catch and release,” said Douglas R. Johnson, an I.R.S. auditor in Colorado for three decades who said he grew so frustrated at how large corporations were allowed to pay far less than what he thought they owed that he transferred to the agency’s small-business division.
For more on this issue, see this post on a recent report from the TRAC program, which monitors government data.
