Five signs your tax preparer may be a fraud

Watch out for a preparer who may ‘ghost’ you

Columnist
March 6, 2024 at 7:00 a.m. EST
(Washington Post illustration; iStock)
5 min

You do a happy dance when your tax preparer promises a large refund.

But what you might not realize is that the guarantee is built on fictitious or inflated business losses and itemized deductions.

That’s what a onetime Baltimore tax preparer did, and he is now poised to spend 27 months in prison for producing more than 1,000 false returns that cost the Internal Revenue Service $4.7 million in lost tax revenue.

B.O.M. — The best of Michelle Singletary on personal finance

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My mortgage payoff story: My husband and I paid off the house in the spring of 2023 thanks to making extra payments and taking advantage of a mortgage recast. Even though it lowered my perfect 850 credit score and my column about it sparked some serious debate with readers, it was one of the best financial decisions I’ve made.

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