Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO examined the: (1) adequacy of
the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) controls to protect against abuse
of taxpayers; (2) extent of information available concerning abuse
allegations received and investigated by IRS, the Department of the
Treasury Office of the Inspector General (OIG), and the Department of
Justice (DOJ); and (3) OIG role in investigating abuse allegations.
GAO found that: (1) the adequacy of IRS controls against taxpayer abuse
is uncertain because IRS does not have the capability to capture
management information on taxpayer abuse; (2) IRS is establishing a
tracking system to handle taxpayer complaints and reviewing its
management information systems to determine the best way to capture
relevant information for the complaint system; (3) the tracking system
will enable IRS to better identify instances of taxpayer abuse and
ensure that actions are taken to prevent their recurrence; (4) IRS is
improving controls over its employees' access to computerized taxpayer
accounts, establishing an expedited appeals process for some collection
actions, and classifying recurring taxpayer problems by major issues;
(5) it is not possible to determine the extent to which allegations of
taxpayer abuse are received and investigated, since IRS, OIG, and DOJ
information systems do not include specific data elements on taxpayer
abuse; (6) OIG has increased the number of investigations involving
senior IRS employees' alleged misconduct, fraud, and abuse; (7) OIG
refers most of these allegations to IRS for investigation and
administrative action; and (8) IRS is taking a considerable amount of
time to respond to OIG investigations and referrals regarding senior IRS
officials' disciplinary actions.
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