As you can guess, Mom, I too have great empathy for those who believe they had submitted a correct, true, and complete filing, but who are told that the IRS has info showing more tax is due— especially when medical issues are concerned.hartley wrote:Seriously, the IRS really doesn't want to charge you additional taxes, penalties, and interest if you don't owe them. It's just that currently all the info they have shows that the distribution should be charged a penalty, which you did not self-assess when you filed your return. Probably one of the codes on your 1099 is wrong, and the bank will have to issue a correction. Once you get the info fixed, the situation will go away.
The 3 biggest hassles you should face during this process are: 1)the IRS is going to lay all the burden of getting the record fixed on you; the people at the 1-800# have *no* power to do *anything* to fix it, all they can do is advise you on how to fix it, and possibly tell you what the status is of the situation after you have responded.
2)convincing the bank to issue the 1099 correction might be a giant pain. Don't believe them if they tell you they can't do it - oh yes they *can,* and they *have* to if it is wrong.
3)Once you, or the bank, sends the info to the IRS, it might be a couple of months before it's resolved, while an IRS employee whose job it is to look at this kind of stuff (this is *not* one of the people staffing the toll-free lines, and you generally will not be able to talk to them) reviews the data. In the meantime, you will probably get another computer-generated notice informing you that you haven't responded and additional interest will apply. This doesn't mean that the IRS didn't get the information, but it can't hurt to call and check just to make sure. You *should* get a letter in the mail once the new information has been looked at, and it will either ask for more information or tell you that you were right after all, and you don't owe anything.
Whether the original 1099-R is wrong or the IRS just disclaims formal notice of disability status, your fact pattern indicates a simple correctable error. The IRS is carefully programmed not to let go of errors favorable to itself without full burden of proof, so sometimes it takes several salvos to demonstrate to everyone that the facts meet that burden.
Hartley has an excellent grasp of this predicament. Whenever IRS info collectively shows more tax due, but your info does not: 1) sole responsibility for pursuing correction is yours; 2) third parties, though they may be held liable for not making the correction you request, may still refuse for other ostensible legal reasons; 3) you must ensure the correction, either the bank's or your own, is obtained by the IRS and ensure it makes it through processing while further adverse steps are simultaneously processing.
If, as Hartley considers possible, the bank chooses not to send the info to the IRS, the responsibility falls back on you to shepherd your correction through the system. I suspect that the actual method of your correction is immaterial, as long as it presents all the facts necessary for reversing the proposed assessment and penalty. You might be equally well-served with 5329 (with which I'm not familiar), 4852 (the official form for correcting erroneous 1099-R's), or an affidavit (potentially containing a scanned and corrected 1099-R for reference). I'm sure you know where I'd refer you to some successful examples of the latter methods for people in your situation without my linking them again.
Because of the IRS's well-established high priority for activities which generate and pursue lawful collections, and relatively low priority for performing its duty to acknowledge proper corrections, you need to be prepared that this may not be the last round of placing your facts on the official record. But as you can see, when we delegate the power to tax, that power operates naturally to be constantly expanding its sphere of destruction (whether we refer to the value spent in maintaining and growing the collection scheme itself, the much greater value spent on wasteful but theoretically republic-chosen expenses, or the slow destruction of due process by dragging it out through ever longer procedures).
Welcome to the "anti-IRS" throng!
BTW, Mom, I've noticed that spiritual preparation is one of the most important factors in disability cases. Could you comment briefly on your spiritual status, and would you accept our group praying for you on any particulars?