Peter E. Hendrickson wrote:ONE OF THE PERNICIOUS FICTIONS persistently promoted by the "ignorance tax" crowd is that CtC-educated victories are the result of some kind of glitch in the tax-agency's systems-- that they have all "slipped through the cracks", and are just a series of remarkably widespread and sustained mistakes that'll get straightened-out in due course.
Hendrickson is lying. Indeed, he is
very well aware that the tax refunds issued to those who have used Hendrickson's Cracking the Code (CtC) scam are indeed the result of
glitches in the system at the Internal Revenue Service. He is well aware that NO ONE at the Internal Revenue Service has ever agreed with Hendrickson or any of his followers that the CtC scheme is anything other than what it actually is: a tax scam.
Hendrickson himself is a persistent, perseverant promoter of lies. He continues to claim that no court has rejected his scheme, when he is well aware that he himself is under a court order never to use his scheme on his own tax return again. He is well aware that he spent nearly two years in federal prison for using the scheme on his own tax returns. He is well aware of the court decisions (some cited in this forum) where the courts have mentioned him by name, as well as the name of his scheme.
And, at least part of the basis for his phony claim that the IRS is somehow approving of his scheme is the dollar amount of tax refund claims obtained by his followers using the scheme.
However, as has been noted several times before in the Quatloos forum, the total dollar amount of tax refunds issued to CtC scammers using the CtC method is
insignificant as a percentage of total dollar amount of fraudulent tax refunds erroneously issued by the IRS each year.
We know this by comparing the dollar amount of CtC refunds that Hendrickson claims on his web site (currently, $11,105,694.95) to the total dollar amount of erroneous refunds according to the official reports of the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.
The total refund amount that Pete has claimed over a period of about ten years is about $11.1 million. But let's say he hasn't updated his figure lately. Let's say it's $15 million. No, let's double it, and say that it's $30 million, since the scam got under way in around 2002 or 2003. That would average out to, say, $3 million per year.
How does $3 million in refunds per year (on average) compare to the total dollar amount of all fraudulent federal tax refunds?
One report indicates that the Internal Revenue Service paid out ONE BILLION DOLLARS in FRAUDULENT refunds for one JUST ONE YEAR:
IRS wrongly paid out $1 billion in 2007 refunds
Agency says it doesn’t have resources to deal with all fraud cases
The Associated Press
updated 4:25 p.m. ET, Thurs., Oct. 30, 2008
WASHINGTON - The government sent out more than $1 billion in fraudulent refunds last year and offered this explanation Thursday for the bad checks in the mail: The Internal Revenue Service has too few resources to pursue every tax fraud case.
IRS investigators never even looked at an estimated $742 million in fraudulent refunds, according to a report by the Treasury Department office that monitors the agency. When they did identify an additional $264 million in bad refunds, it was too late to stop them from being issued.
The report noted that the IRS must divide its limited resources among numerous areas of compliance. "However, this is a significant revenue loss to the federal government and that must be addressed," said J. Russell George, the Treasury's inspector general for tax administration.
The number of improper refunds filed appears to be growing rapidly, the report said. "The problem is becoming unmanageable, and the IRS cannot afford to continue handling it in the same manner as in the past," according to the report. It urged the tax agency to make the refund screening program — known as the Questionable Refund Program — a priority.
The IRS has estimated that the tax gap — the difference between taxes owed and taxes actually paid — at about $290 billion a year. Of that, about 57 percent comes from individuals understating incomes or overstating deductions and exemptions.
IRS spokesman Terry Lemons said the agency has made significant improvements over the past two years. "We stop the vast majority of fraudulent refunds and we prosecute people who try to cheat the system," Lemons said.
George's report recommended the IRS divert resources to go after such fraud cases. But Lemons said that could hurt other operations and mean fewer dollars from enforcement activities.
Lemons said the agency issued more than $470 billion in refunds in 2006 and 2007.
The report said the IRS fraud detection centers stopped more than $1.2 billion in fraudulent refunds in 2007, compared with $412 million in 2005, the last year the detection system fully functioned.
Because the system picks up only those refunds with higher dollar values, about 500,000 potentially fraudulent refunds did not enter the centers' screening process. Had those refunds been included, the centers would have identified an additional $742 million in fraud, the report estimated.
In 2006, because of a technical problem in the fraud detection system, the IRS succeeded in identifying and stopping only $189 million in fraudulent refunds while paying out an estimated $894 million, the report said....
(large font added by me, for emphasis).
Hendrickson has spent two terms in federal prison for tax crimes, and he has gotten what he deserved.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet