WASHINGTON - Voluntary disclosure practices that allow taxpayers to voluntarily
disclose the existence of offshore accounts or assets to the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) are generally effective, according to a new report publicly released by the Treasury
Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA).
Taxpayers who do not submit a voluntary disclosure run the risk of detection by the IRS.
If caught, these taxpayers face the imposition of substantial penalties, including the fraud
and foreign information return penalties, as well as an increased risk of criminal
prosecution. By making an offshore voluntary disclosure, taxpayers can become
compliant, avoid substantial civil penalties, and generally eliminate the risk of criminal
prosecution.
TIGTA's audit was initiated to determine whether the IRS's voluntary disclosure
practices were effective, especially with the high volume of cases received, and to
determine whether all cases have been appropriately assigned and worked.
TIGTA found that the IRS's voluntary disclosure practices were effective, and cases were
being appropriately assigned and verified even with the unusually high volume of
disclosure requests received and accepted. However, some improvements are needed.
Specifically, TIGTA's review of 60 closed voluntary disclosure cases showed that 18
cases had no evidence of the taxpayers reconciling the unreported income in their
offshore accounts to their amended or newly filed delinquent tax returns.
Further, in 28 cases, information from the taxpayers' financial accounts either was not
captured or was incorrectly transcribed on the data collection system used for current and
subsequent data mining efforts. In 31 cases, voluntary disclosure agreements were not
printed on IRS watermarked paper or initialed by revenue agents on each page to ensure
no alterations to the original document were made by taxpayers.
TIGTA recommended that the Commissioner, Large Business and International Division,
implement a requirement for taxpayers to provide a detailed reconciliation of unreported
income. The Commissioner, Large Business and International Division, and the
Commissioner, Small Business/Self-Employed Division, should develop a quality review
process to ensure all data relating to voluntary disclosures are properly transcribed for
future data mining and require revenue agents to initial each page of the voluntary
disclosure agreement before submitting it to taxpayers for their signature.
In their response to the report, IRS management agreed with two of the three
recommendations. Management disagreed with the recommendation to require revenue
agents to initial each page of the voluntary disclosure agreement before submitting it to
taxpayers for their signature.