July 2023 Scam: New IRS Imposter Scam Alert

Last week, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued a warning to taxpayers to be on the lookout for a new scam that tricks people into thinking they are owed a refund. This new fraud comes through the mail in a cardboard envelope from a delivery service. The letter includes the IRS masthead but the contact information provided is NOT a legitimate IRS phone number.

The letter also requests sensitive, detailed information like a photo of your driver’s license, which may be used to steal your identity.

This particular imposter letter includes many red flags such as poorly worded messages, odd punctuation, a mixture of fonts and incorrect details like including the wrong extension deadline date.

Here are some reminders about the IRS. They will NEVER:

  • initiate contact with taxpayers by email, text or social media regarding a bill or tax refund

  • call to demand payment with threats to involve law enforcement or have you arrested

  • call or email asking you to divulge personal and/or financial information

  • require payment without allowing you to appeal or even question the amount due

  • require you to use a specific payment method like a pre-paid debit card

  • ask for your credit/debit card and/or bank information over the phone

If you receive any IRS-related scam communication, please report it to Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) at www.treasury.gov/tigta/ and email the IRS at phishing@irs.gov

The IRS offers an option called Identity Protection PIN (IP PIN) that assigns a unique six-digit code to eligible taxpayers that helps limit fraudulent tax returns. There is more information available at irs.gov/identity-theft-fraud-scams/get-an-identity-protection-pin.

Source: IRS.gov

 
 

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August 2023 Scam: Preventing Caregiver Fraud

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June 2023 Scam: Elder Abuse Red Flags