Has The U.S.
Become a Prison?
Another
Travel Ban: IRS Moves To Revoke Passports For Unpaid
Taxes
By Robert W. Wood
February 03,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Forbes"
- President
Trump's executive order on travel may be generating big
protests, but an IRS missive on travel and passports may
not go down too well either. More than a year ago, in H.R.22,
Congress gave the IRS a new weapon to collect taxes. Tax
code
Section 7345 is labeled, “Revocation or Denial of
Passport in Case of Certain Tax Delinquencies.” The
law isn't limited to criminal tax cases, or even cases
where the IRS thinks you are trying to flee. The idea of
the law is to use travel as a way to enforce tax
collections. It was proposed and rejected in 2012. But
by late 2015, Congress passed it and President Obama
signed it.
Now, over a
year later, the IRS has finally released new
details on its website. If you have seriously
delinquent tax debt, IRS can notify the State
Department. The State Department generally will not
issue or renew a passport after receiving certification
from the IRS. The IRS has not yet started certifying tax
debt to the State Department. The IRS says
certifications will begin in early 2017, and the IRS
website will be updated to indicate when this
process has been implemented.
Here is the new
information from the IRS. Seriously delinquent tax debt
is an individual's unpaid, legally enforceable federal
tax debt totaling more than $50,000 (including interest
and penalties, but subject to an inflation adjustment)
for which:
-
A notice of
federal tax lien has been filed and all
administrative remedies under IRC § 6320 have lapsed
or been exhausted or
-
A levy has
been issued
Some tax debt
is not included in determining seriously delinquent tax
debt even if it meets the above criteria. It includes
tax debt:
-
Being paid in
a timely manner under an installment agreement
entered into with the IRS
- Being paid
in a timely manner under an offer in compromise
accepted by the IRS or a settlement agreement
entered into with the Justice Department
- For which
a collection due process hearing is timely requested
in connection with a levy to collect the debt
-
For which
collection has been suspended because a request for
innocent spouse relief under IRC Section 6015 has
been made
Before denying
a passport, the State Department will hold your
application for 90 days to allow you to:
-
Resolve any
erroneous certification issues
- Make full
payment of the tax debt
-
Enter into a
satisfactory payment alternative with the IRS
There is no
grace period for resolving the debt before the State
Department revokes a passport.
Taxpayer Notification. The
IRS is required to notify you in writing at the time the
IRS certifies seriously delinquent tax debt to the State
Department. The IRS is also required to notify you in
writing at the time it reverses certification. The IRS
will send written notice by regular mail to your last
known address.
Reversal Of Certification.
The IRS will notify the State Department of the reversal
of the certification when:
-
The tax debt
is fully satisfied or becomes legally unenforceable.
- The tax
debt is no longer seriously delinquent.
-
The
certification is erroneous.
The IRS will
provide notice as soon as practicable if the
certification is erroneous. The IRS will provide notice
within 30 days of the date the debt is fully satisfied,
becomes legally unenforceable or ceases to be seriously
delinquent tax debt. A previously certified debt is no
longer seriously delinquent when:
-
You and the
IRS enter into an installment agreement allowing you
to pay the debt over time.
- The IRS
accepts an offer in compromise to satisfy the debt.
- The
Justice Department enters into a settlement
agreement to satisfy the debt.
- Collection
is suspended because you request innocent spouse
relief under IRC Section 6015.
-
You make a
timely request for a collection due process hearing
in connection with a levy to collect the debt.
The IRS will
not reverse certification where a taxpayer requests a
collection due process hearing or innocent spouse relief
on a debt that is not the basis of the certification.
Also, the IRS will not reverse the certification because
the taxpayer pays the debt below $50,000.
Judicial Review. If the IRS
certified your debt to the State Department, you can
file suit in the U.S. Tax Court or a U.S. District Court
to have the court determine whether the certification is
erroneous, or the IRS failed to reverse the
certification when it was required to do so. If the
court determines the certification is erroneous or
should be reversed, it can order reversal of the
certification.
IRC Section
7345 does not provide the court authority to release a
lien or levy or award money damages in a suit to
determine whether a certification is erroneous. You are
not required to file an administrative claim or
otherwise contact the IRS to resolve the erroneous
certification issue before filing suit in the U.S. Tax
Court or a U.S. District Court.
Payment of Taxes. If you
can’t pay the full amount you owe, you can make
alternative payment arrangements such as an installment
agreement or an offer in compromise and still keep your
U.S. passport. If you disagree with the tax amount or
the certification was made in error, you should contact
the phone number listed on Notice CP 508C. If you’ve
already paid the tax debt, please send proof of that
payment to the address on the Notice CP 508C. If you
recently filed your tax return for the current year and
expect a refund , the IRS will apply the refund to the
debt and if the refund is sufficient to satisfy your
seriously delinquent tax debt, the account is considered
fully paid.
Passport Status. If you
need to verify whether your U.S. passport has been
cancelled or revoked, you should contact the State
Department by calling the National Passport Information
Center at 877-487-2778. If you need your U.S. passport
to keep your job, once your seriously delinquent tax
debt is certified, you must fully pay the balance, or
make an alternative payment arrangement to keep your
passport. Once you’ve resolved your tax problem with the
IRS, the IRS will reverse the certification within 30
days of resolution of the issue.
Travel. If you’re leaving
in a few days for international travel and need to
resolve passport issues, you should call the phone
number listed on Notice CP 508C. If you already have a
U.S. passport, you can use your passport until you’re
notified by the State Department that it’s taking action
to revoke or limit your passport. If the Secretary of
State decides to revoke a passport, the Secretary of
State, before making the revocation, may—
-
Limit a
previously issued passport only for return travel to
the United States; or
-
Issue a
limited passport that only permits return travel to
the United States.
If your
passport is cancelled or revoked, after you’re
certified, you must resolve the tax debt by paying the
debt in full, making alternative payment arrangements or
showing that the certification is erroneous. The IRS
will notify the State Department of the reversal of your
certification within 30 days of the date the tax debt is
resolved.
The views
expressed in this article are solely those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
Information Clearing House. |