After Budget Cuts, the IRS's Work Against Tax Cheats is Facing "Collapse"
Audits and criminal referrals are down sharply since Congress cut the tax agencys budget and management changed priorities.
This story was co-published with The New York Times.
Tax evasion is at the center of the criminal cases against two associates of the president, Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen. The sheer scale of their efforts to avoid paying the government has given rise to a head-scratching question: How were they able to cheat the Internal Revenue Service for so many years?
The answer, researchers and former government auditors say, is simple. The IRS pursues fewer cases of tax evasion than it did less than 10 years ago. Provided youre not a close associate of President Donald Trump, there may never be a better time to be a tax cheat.
Last year, the IRSs criminal division brought 795 cases in which tax fraud was the primary crime, a decline of almost a quarter since 2010. That is a startling number, Don Fort, the chief of criminal investigations for the IRS, acknowledged at an NYU tax conference in June.
Bringing cases against people who evade taxes on legal income is central to the revenue services mission. In addition to recouping lost revenue, such cases are supposed to influence taxpayer behavior for the hundreds of millions of American citizens filing tax returns, Fort said. With fewer cases, experts fear, Americans will get the message that its all right to break the law.
Starting in 2011, Republicans in Congress repeatedly cut the IRSs budget, forcing the agency to reduce its enforcement staff by a third. But that drop doesnt entirely explain the reduction in tax fraud cases.
Over time, crimes only tangentially related to taxes, such as drug trafficking and money laundering, have come to account for most of the agencys cases.
https://www.propublica.org/article/after-budget-cuts-the-irs-work-against-tax-cheats-is-facing-collapse