From Accounting Today:
"Maryland Comptroller Peter Franchot said Tuesday he has suspended processing of electronic and paper tax returns from 16 Liberty Tax Service franchise locations due to a high volume of questionable returns received, on top of seven Baltimore-area Liberty locations that he suspended processing last week..
Some of the suspicious characteristics
detected on the tax returns included business income reported when
taxpayers did not own a business, refund amounts requested much higher
than previous year tax returns, inflated and/or undocumented business
expenses, dependents claimed when taxpayer did not provide required 50
percent support or care, and inflated wages and withholding information.
The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan also issued a complaint
last week seeking an injunction against another Liberty Tax Service
franchisee in Detroit, Craig M. Comer, who manages five Liberty stores,
claiming he filed hundreds, if not thousands, of fraudulent income tax
returns.
Liberty told Accounting Today it is cooperating with the
Maryland investigation, and that the franchisee in Detroit is no longer
part associated with the company.
Liberty Tax has a robust compliance
program, and we expect our franchisees to make sure that their offices
comply with all federal and state tax requirements," said Jim Wheaton,
general counsel, chief compliance officer and vice president of legal
and governmental affairs at Liberty Tax. "Since we learned of Maryland's
concerns late last week, we have provided all requested information to
the state, and have devoted significant efforts to looking at the
offices identified last Thursday. We offered additional training to our
franchisees' employees in Maryland earlier this week, and will do so
again in the coming days. We will also address any concerns with the
offices Maryland identified to us this afternoon. We have had a
cooperative and productive relationship with the State of Maryland in
the past, and expect to work with them to address their current
concerns. In fact, we have offered to meet with them at their
convenience, and look forward to the opportunity to work with the state
to protect the public and meet the needs of each of our customers and
the state."
Of the Detroit case, Wheaton said, "We’re looking at
that concern, which relates to prior tax seasons, but the person who was
the subject of that injunction lawsuit last week is actually no longer a
franchisee. They disposed of their stores last year and they’re no
longer on our system. So while we’re certainly looking at it and taking
it seriously, that franchisee is not a franchisee in the Liberty system
any longer."
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