A report from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, which was released Tuesday, said that 496 employees received income from either a large accounting firm or corporation “either prior to joining, during their time at, or after leaving the IRS.”
Of those, 241 got paid by a large accounting firm and 255 by a large corporation, according to The Hill.
“Our review found no direct correlation between the employees’ work assignments and the company or firm from which they came or left for in the private sector,” the report said.
“However, our review identified four Office of Chief Counsel non-executive employees who charged time to a private letter ruling in which the taxpayer’s representative was the same large accounting firm that the employee recently worked for before joining the IRS or left the IRS to join. While not a direct correlation, this can raise impartiality concerns,” the report said.
The review said that IRS policies to address potential conflicts of interest “primarily rely on individual self-reporting.”
However, the report warned that “this practice increases the risk for conflicts of interest.”
“For example, the movement of employees in and out of the private sector to public service can increase the risk of conflicts of interest for incoming and outgoing employees and the possibility of undue influence by former or prospective employers that might lead to preferential treatment or create an unfair advantage for specific entities or individuals,” the report said.
The report noted that there are restrictions on what former IRS employees can do after leaving the agency
“The purpose is to prevent an employee from ‘switching sides’ on a matter in which they were involved when employed in a Government agency. However, there are no restrictions that prohibit any former employee, regardless of Government rank or position, from accepting employment with any particular private or public employer,” the report said.
The Hill noted that Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington asked for the investigation.
“The questions raised by giant accounting firms’ use of the revolving door to benefit their clients falls squarely within your missions to ‘promote economy, efficiency and effectiveness’ and ‘prevent and detect fraud and abuse’ in the programs and operations of the Treasury Department and IRS,” they said.
In its response to the report, the IRS said it needs private expertise to do its job.
“Given the report’s focus on large corporate taxpayers, we note that effective tax administration for this segment of the population necessitates having a highly skilled and experienced workforce that can successfully conduct complex audits of...
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3 comments:
OK for the IRS to cheat, but Katie bar the door if it's one of the peons.
Rotten to the core, all of it.
There is no recovery from the inexcusable corruption.
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