jkeeb wrote:The examiner (GS-5, 6 or 7, going by the IRM, accepted the "Amended" 1099 Misc.
That's some pretty amazing incompetence. Why didn't the examiner pick up a phone and call the payer? Or at least write a letter? Oh, well, close enough for government work, they caught it a year or two later.
But, what is with these CtC clowns? Never mind that they are completely wrong on the law, don't they understand that it's impossible to make the mechanics of this stupid scheme work without committing fraud?
As most everyone here knows, 1099s are filed (speaking of paper here, but the same concept applies to electronic filings) by the payer. They're filed with a 1096 summary of what type and total amount of 1099 is being submitted. Corrected 1099s are filed the same way. A 1096 has to be signed under penalties of perjury by some authorized representative of the paying entity -- owner, partner, officer, trustee or whoever.
If you just make up your own "corrected" form 1099 and hang it on your return, you're 100% guaranteed to be caught by the matching program.
If you file an actual "corrected" form 1099 and accompanying 1096 in the name of the payer (not so hard to do, the payee has the name, address and tax ID of the payer, and the payee may know the name and title of whoever signs payer's returns) you're forging and filing a fraudulent 1096 along with a fraudulent 1099 which is also covered by the 1096 jurat. Your brand-new zero 1099 amount will then be ignored as there's nothing to match which might result in getting away with it for a little longer, but the blatant felony tax fraud is there forever (with no statute of limitation.)
Any why, since no 1099, original or corrected is supposed to be filed with any return (other than a 1096) would any idiot file a bogus self-"corrected" zero-amount 1099 with a return -- that has to be a red-flag leading straight to Ogden in and of itself.
These people are beyond stupid.
All the States incorporated daughter corporations for transaction of business in the 1960s or so. - Some voice in Van Pelt's head, circa 2006.