Summary:


The Internal Revenue Service is preparing to help homeland security officials locate immigrants they are trying to deport, according to three officials familiar with the matter, in a shift toward using protected taxpayer information to help President Trump’s mass deportation push.

Under a draft of an agreement between the I.R.S. and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the tax agency would verify whether immigration officials had the right home address for people who have been ordered to leave the United States, according to a copy of the document viewed by The New York Times.

Many undocumented immigrants file tax returns with the I.R.S., giving the agency information about where they live, their families, their employers and their earnings. The I.R.S. has long encouraged undocumented immigrants to pay their taxes, giving people without Social Security numbers a separate nine-digit code called an individual taxpayer identification number to file their returns.

Tax information is closely guarded because federal law bars improper disclosure. I.R.S. officials had resisted earlier requests from the Department of Homeland Security to turn over information about unauthorized immigrants, warning that doing so could violate federal law.


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  • @[email protected]
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    020 days ago

    So… the goal is to get rid of the illegal immigrants afraid to pay taxes… great plan.

      • @[email protected]
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        220 days ago

        er yeah lol was toggling between get rid of the immigrants that pay taxes, or to make immigrants afraid to pay taxes… and somehow got half of each stuck together.

      • @[email protected]
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        119 days ago

        Yeah, they’ll just be afraid to attempt a return, so the government will keep it all, while spreading the lie that undocumented immigrants don’t pay taxes.

        • @[email protected]
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          119 days ago

          More likely that they would owe, and were filing in order to not draw undue attention. Now they’re disincentivized from taking on work that will result in employment and income taxes, hurting IRS income further.