Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Internal
Revenue Service's (IRS) use of seizure authority, focusing on
whether: (1) IRS targeted the most noncompliant taxpayers; (2) IRS
brought affected taxpayers into compliance; (3) IRS exercised
appropriate discretion in conducting seizures; and (4) IRS'
implementation of the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998
would address any weaknesses found in the pre-Restructuring Act
seizure process.
GAO noted that: (1) IRS' use of seizure authority produced mixed
results in terms of targeting the most noncompliant taxpayers and
then bringing them into compliance; (2) GAO's review of a sample of
fiscal year 1997 seizures showed the following: (a) seizures
targeted the more noncompliant taxpayers; (b) seizures were as much
as 17 times more likely to occur for delinquent individual
taxpayers in some IRS district offices than others; (c) many
seizures improved compliance with the tax laws; and (d) some
seizures produced little revenue to the government and contributed
little to resolving the taxpayers' delinquencies; (3) in reviewing
115 sample seizure cases, GAO found examples in which IRS revenue
officers' use of discretion in deciding whether and how to conduct
a seizure was questionable; (4) GAO recognizes that some revenue
officer discretion is necessary and that the adversarial nature of
seizure cases can limit the information available to revenue
officers when making seizure decisions; (5) nevertheless, some of
the decisions made by revenue officers were questionable; (6) IRS'
use of seizure authority is in transition while IRS adapts to the
Restructuring Act requirements; (7) revenue officers have expressed
concerns about a lack of guidance on when to make seizures in light
of the act, and the number of seizures has declined about 98
percent; (8) IRS officials expect the number of seizures to rebound
as changes to the seizure program are implemented and revenue
officers adapt to the new requirements; (9) GAO's review of IRS'
processes for protecting taxpayer rights and interests in planning
and conducting seizures identified implementation breakdowns and,
in some instances, inadequate process requirements; (10) breakdowns
and inadequate processes were also identified in the postseizure
processes for controlling assets, selling assets, and reviewing
actions taken; (11) because of the severe impact that seizures may
have on taxpayers, GAO views any breakdown in the seizure process
as a weakness; (12) GAO's comparison of the weaknesses found in the
pre-Restructuring Act seizure program with the changes IRS is
making shows that some significant weaknesses are not being fully
addressed; (13) with respect to controlling the use of seizure
authority, it is unclear whether continued reliance on manual
reviews of revenue officer case files, which failed to prevent
process departures in the past, would be sufficient to prevent
departures from process requirements in the future; and (14) only
limited guidance is being provided to revenue officers on how to
carry out and document some of the new seizure guidelines.
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