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The Internal Revenue Service is investigating American Express Co. AXP 0.87% over a questionable tax break that it pitched to clients, according to people familiar with the matter.

The civil investigation has been under way for a few months, these people said. The Wall Street Journal reported in November that AmEx salespeople touted a tax break based on a shaky interpretation of tax law. The pitch was part of a strategy to persuade business owners to sign up for costly payment services.



AmEx Staff Misled Small-Business Owners to Boost Card Sign-Ups ()March 1, 2020)
AmEx previously acknowledged, in response to the November story, that some members of its U.S. sales organization “failed to uphold our values and had positioned certain products inappropriately, specifically with respect to tax benefits.”

An AmEx spokesman said this week that “we have already taken a number of actions to change products, policies and personnel and are continuing to cooperate with our regulators and government agencies.”

“As we said in November, we engaged an external law firm to conduct an investigation of our small business sales practices in the U.S.,” he added. AmEx “will take further steps as appropriate.”

AmEx previously said that it discontinued wire services associated with the pitch. These had been available to a wide range of companies, according to people familiar with the matter.

Last month, AmEx sales employees were told that the company was discontinuing a payments service for McDonald’s Corp. franchise owners associated with the tax pitch, according to people familiar with the matter.

Such IRS investigations can take years. In an investigation like this, AmEx could decide to give the IRS the names of clients who signed up for the payments services, according to tax attorneys. AmEx could have to turn over the profits it made from the sales strategy, they said.
It couldn’t be determined whether the IRS is examining any of the business owners’ tax returns.

An IRS spokesman said the agency is prohibited by law from commenting on specific taxpayers.

The sales pitch that the IRS is investigating was previously described to the Journal by current and former employees, and in training and sales documents reviewed by the Journal. AmEx encouraged businesses, including eye doctors, McDonald’s franchisees and payroll companies, to use AmEx to pay vendors and employees through wire or card transactions. Salespeople told the businesses that they could deduct the resulting fees as expenses, the Journal previously reported. Salespeople also told the businesses they could transfer the rewards points they’d earn to a certain AmEx card, and then the business owner could convert those points into untaxed cash, the Journal reported.

Rewards points generally aren’t considered income for individuals who generate them when they make personal purchases. It is less clear-cut when there is a separation between the entity earning the reward—the business—and the individual receiving the awards.

A whistleblower filed a report with the IRS last summer alleging that AmEx knowingly persuaded business owners to underreport their income and taxes, the Journal previously reported. The IRS allows whistleblowers to get a share of taxes the government collects because of information they provide.

AmEx has in recent weeks terminated at least a handful of vice presidents who oversaw sales teams that pitched the strategy, according to people familiar with the matter.

Other federal agencies had already been probing AmEx over the way it sells cards.



The Justice Department’s civil fraud and criminal divisions are investigating AmEx’s business-card sales practices, as are the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the inspectors general offices of the Treasury Department, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and Federal Reserve. AmEx has said it is cooperating.

The IRS is working with at least some of those agencies, according to people familiar with the matter. It is examining allegations that AmEx salespeople used fake tax identification numbers when filling out card applications for small businesses, they said. Those numbers are also known as TINs or employer identification numbers.

Higher-ups told salespeople that many small-business owners don’t immediately know their TINs, and that using a dummy number like 123456789 could keep the application moving, according to the people familiar with the matter. The practice occurred from at least 2014 until 2018, they said.

An AmEx spokesman said the company no longer allows this practice. “Several years ago we allowed existing small business card members, who wanted additional American Express cards and did not have their business’ tax identification number readily available, to apply for a new card by populating the application with a temporary number,” he said.

link: https://www.wsj.com/articles/i...221?mod=hp_lead_pos3
 
Posts: 17258 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
blame canada
Picture of AKSuperDually
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Interesting. I had some interesting conversations with a Seattle based AMEX team back in lat November with them pitching some interesting incentives if we would sign up with them for our merchant services. I was tempted, but ultimately passed.


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"The trouble with our Liberal friends...is not that they're ignorant, it's just that they know so much that isn't so." Ronald Reagan, 1964
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"Arguing with some people is like playing chess with a pigeon. It doesn't matter how good I am at chess, the pigeon will just take a shit on the board, strut around knocking over all the pieces and act like it won.. and in some cases it will insult you at the same time." DevlDogs55, 2014 Big Grin
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Posts: 13957 | Location: On the mouth of the great Kenai River | Registered: June 24, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Fighting the good fight
Picture of RogueJSK
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Moral of the story: Don't take tax advice from salespeople.
 
Posts: 32540 | Location: Northwest Arkansas | Registered: January 06, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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