The story is great. The tax investigation trends are depressing.
"Low-income taxpayers earning $25,000 are just as likely to be audited as higher-income taxpayers earning more than $100,000.
About these three-year trends, TRAC says that "criminal enforcement is in shambles"; that there are problems with "corporate responsibility and the Bush administration"; and that the IRS is currently "going after the little guys."
Hmmm. Why my mom? The IRS randomly picks 1.5 percent of taxpayers and then looks for "discrepancies" in the taxpayer's return and bank account. In mom's case, discrepancies did exist. Here's the kicker: My dad died in 2001, and in 2002 my mom and I sold all of his accumulated stuff - his truck, small airplane, motorcycles, and lots and lots of shop tools and toys. Mom also sold their house and bought a condo in town. Money came from all these sales, went into mom's bank account, and then into fixed-income bonds. The IRS is auditing mom because she had "unusual activity in her bank account." Her accountant explained this "unusual activity" to the IRS agent. "Sorry," the agent said, "the audit continues." "
Maybe Lou Dobbs could put the taxes paid by the names of corporations he lists as sending jobs overseas. Now that could be an interesting number. I read recently (I think linked here at DU?) that last year Haliburton paid 15 million. Now what percentage of their income do you think that is?
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36%257E73%257E1964392,00.htmledited for a better link