Over the weekend, I came across this  article on Ailbaba.com about crooked tax preparers in New York, and  I wanted to make sure post about it here on my blog. It is very important  to have strict laws and regulations in place so that everyone in the  tax preparation industry is properly trained and in full compliance  of all tax laws. I am glad to see New York is taking action to help  ensure compliance. Below is a snippet from the article, but you can  read the full version by clicking  here.
New York State tax officials say they  have uncovered evidence of significant fraud among professional tax-return  preparers in a statewide sting operation in which undercover agents  posed as clients.
Officials say they're startled not only  by the unexpectedly large amounts of tax evasion they witnessed -- such  as hiding taxable income and inflating deductions -- but also by the  brazen nature of the cheating, which was caught on secret recordings.  In one case, for example, a preparer told an undercover investigator:  "I did not declare your full gross income from your business because  you will pay a lot of taxes," according to a criminal complaint  filed recently against a Queens, N.Y., preparer.
In another case, a tax preparer said  he is going to report only $13,188 as taxable income, instead of the  $131,884 the undercover agent had said was the correct amount, says  an official at the New York Department of Taxation and Finance. Another  preparer, referring to records given to him by the undercover agent,  said: "This one and this one, I never saw this. It's going into  the shredder."
Officials have already begun prosecuting  some preparers on criminal charges, and they expect additional criminal  prosecutions against other preparers -- as well as some clients, says  William Comiskey, the tax department's deputy commissioner, office of  tax enforcement. Officials will also be seeking civil fraud penalties  against preparers. Mr. Comiskey says some preparers have agreed to cooperate  and go undercover to show that their clients knew of the fraud and build  evidence against those clients -- and, in some instances, against other  preparers.
"They are cooperating against their  former clients in other ways as well," such as sharing client lists  and identifying fraudulent returns, Mr. Comiskey says. He says the state  hasn't yet investigated tax-preparation chains, and that most of the  preparers "were sole practitioners or were in small group practices."
 
