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IRS Announces
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I Have to Sell My Home, But I Have a Tax Lien
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Steve Kassel in Washington Times Article 4-17-06
IRS Tax Lien & Levy
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IRS Warning on Offer in Compromise Promoters
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Steve Kassel
in the spotlight:
Good Morning America 1999
Picture/Transcript
New York Times:
October 10, 1999 New York Times
July 20, 1999 New York Times
July 18, 1999 EA Journal
Nov-Dec, 1999 CNNfn.com:
August 4, 1999
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Steve Kassel on Good Morning
America

After being prominently mentioned in the New
York Times on October 10, I received a call from ABC's Good Morning America. I
was invited on to do an interview with Charlie Gibson the next morning.
This is a
transcript of that interview: Charles
Gibson, GMA: In this half hour, Elizabeth, we turn to a
subject that concerns all of us, taxes. You may remember that two years ago
Congress called the IRS on the carpet in a series of well publicized hearings.
Called the IRS on the carpet for allegedly abusing taxpayers. Now, according to
the New York Times, the agency has left billions of dollars in back taxes go
uncollected. Has
the IRS gone too soft? Joining us from San Francisco is Steve Kassel, a former
IRS agent. Steve, it's good to have you with us. Steve
Kassel, EA: Good morning. Charles
Gibson, GMA: Are there billions of dollars out there in
uncollected taxes that the IRS isn't going after? Steve
Kassel, EA: There certainly are and there are a few reasons
for that. One is that the IRS has changed certain policies which has impacted
the way taxes are collected. Another is that many senior IRS personnel in both
the collection and the examination side are being moved to taxpayer service
functions which is what the Commissioner has opted to stress. Charles
Gibson, GMA: Well, I remember in those hearings the IRS
was called on the carpet for being so abusive and so aggressive in its
collection tactics. Are they too worried now about being abusive; too worried
about being repressive, even those agents who are still on collections? Steve
Kassel, EA: I think so. A couple things happened. One, when I
testified on Capitol Hill before the Restructuring Commission, I brought with me
a stack of cases where the IRS had taken the statute of limitations; that is the
amount of time the IRS has to collect the tax, out to as far as the year 2025.
Normally they only have 10 years to collect the tax. Well, as a result of the
Congressional investigations, that law was changed and the IRS now has very
limited opportunities to collect taxes past the normal statute of limitations. What
also happened though is that they made a decision on their own last year that if
a payment agreement will not satisfy a debt in full over the life of the statute
of limitations, they will not enter into a payment agreement. And this has
caused billions of dollars to be uncollected. Charles
Gibson, GMA: So let me make sure I understand that last point.
If a delinquent taxpayer, someone who owes the IRS a lot of money, can't pay it
off in full over the number of years that the IRS can go after them. If they're
just willing to pay over a little bit at a time, the IRS is saying "no we
don't want the little bit, we want all or nothing"?
Steve Kassel,
EA: In many cases, yes. Charles
Gibson, GMA: Why? Steve
Kassel, EA: There is another opportunity called an Offer
in Compromise. An Offer in Compromise is where we go to the IRS, typically
hat in hand and we say "we don't have the ability to pay this in
full". We're going to make an Offer to compromise the debt for
substantially less than the total due. Charles
Gibson, GMA: But it would seem to me something is better
than nothing. Why would the IRS turn it's back on something? Steve
Kassel, EA: Well, you're certainly right. The problem that the
IRS has caused is when an Offer is not an appropriate course of action and a
payment agreement won't pay it off; for instance, I have a client in Connecticut
that can afford pay $600 a month on a $100,000 debt. The IRS said you can't do
that. We won't take just $600 a month. Well, we're left in a position now where
we may submit an Offer in that case, but the way I calculate out the numbers the
IRS is going to collect far less than what we're offering them in monthly
payments. Charles
Gibson, GMA: Let me ask you then, is this a good time for we
the average taxpayer to try to stiff arm the IRS? I mean, if they're being
rather lax in the way they go after delinquents why won't a lot of people...a
lot more people be delinquent? Steve
Kassel, EA: I think it's a possibility that definitely does
exist. What I would say for certain is that if you do owe the IRS today; this is
definitely the right time to submit an Offer in Compromise. At the same time
examinations are down 25 to 40 percent. Collection officials are putting many of
their resources into customer service as well. So they don't the bodies to even
work the cases right now.
Charles Gibson, GMA:
Steve, I'm out of time, but a quick yes or no answer. Has the IRS overreacted to
some extent in that Congressional pressure?
Steve Kassel,
EA: I think so. They've gone 180 degrees. We need to make some
changes that are less extreme. Charles
Gibson, GMA: Alright. Steve Kassel, thank you very much.
Appreciate talking to you. Isn't that curious? We take a break. We'll be back.
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