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Topic: 40 Acres and a Mule (Read 1162 times) |
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Hermit
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Prime example of a practically perfect person
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40 Acres and a Mule
« on: 2002-04-15 03:27:25 » |
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IRS paid millions for slavery-tax-credit claims
Source: San Diego Union Tribune Authors: Ass-osiated Press Dated: 2002-04-14 Noticed By: Daemonikan
WASHINGTON – The Internal Revenue Service mistakenly paid out more than $30 million to tax filers seeking nonexistent slavery tax credits in 2000 and 2001, according to a Treasury Department investigation.
A growing number of black taxpayers are being misled by scams falsely claiming that, for a fee, they can get tax credits or refunds as reparations for slavery. The scams are given credence when some taxpayers actually get money.
The IRS received more than 77,000 tax returns last year claiming $2.7 billion in reparations refunds, up from 13,000 the year before. Last year, the IRS discovered that some erroneous refunds were being issued but was only partly effective in stopping them.
The Treasury inspector general for tax administration, David C. Williams, said in Senate testimony last week that refunds of more than $80,000 were issued "in some instances" to married couples when each spouse claimed the reparations credit.
In 2000 and the first four months of 2001, Williams said, more than $30 million in erroneous reparations payments were paid. After April of last year, a computer program developed by the inspector general identified an additional $16.1 million in claims before they were paid.
The Washington Post, citing an unidentified official, reported that one IRS employee is under investigation for allegedly helping process returns that claimed the credit. At least 12 current and former IRS employees, all low-level workers in processing centers, applied to receive such a credit, the newspaper report said.
Most of the mistaken payments were for about $43,000, a figure Essence magazine suggested in 1993 as the updated value of 40 acres and a mule, which some freed slaves were given under an order by a Union general during the Civil War.
The tax agency is now trying to recover the money it paid out, though officials would not disclose how much has been collected.
Starting tomorrow, the IRS will be begin levying a $500 fine on taxpayers who do not withdraw the claim.
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With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. - Steven Weinberg, 1999
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ElvenSage
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Think for yourself, question authority.
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Re:40 Acres and a Mule
« Reply #1 on: 2002-04-18 11:40:03 » |
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Well, most of those people most likely already have the money spent. How is it right for them to take it back, ya know? You dont hand someone money, even if it is by mistake, and then punish the person for not handing it back. Sure, it is the right thing to do, but sometimes It's too late.
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Safe from the pain and truth and choice and other poison devils See.. they don't give a fuck about you, like i do. Just stay with me, safe and ignorant, Go back to sleep Go Back to sleep
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