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If you're asking whether you have to pay someone to represent you in an IRS audit, the answer is no, you don't "have" to.

Whether you choose to have someone represent you depends on what issues the IRS raises, and whether you think there may be defensible positions taken on the return.

The IRS will give you some indication of what they will be looking at in the audit.

The document linked below has more information from the IRS web site.

2006-06-12 07:18:14 · answer #1 · answered by just_the_facts_ma'am 6 · 0 0

In any case, do not offer more information than what they ask for. Don't copy everything and send it to them nor talk a lot while they are there. Answer questions with "yes" or "no". Do this as a protection to yourself.

You don't have to pay for the audit and will only owe taxes if they find you did not calculate your taxes properly (or misfigured your income).

Good luck.

2006-06-12 14:56:41 · answer #2 · answered by Molly 6 · 0 0

Your best bet is to purchase the tax audit protection plan, when it's offered by your agent.

Ultimately it's your responsibility to make sure it's right, but with the protection at least you can point the finger.

You'd still have to pay depending on what the contract says when you purchased the protection plan.

2006-06-16 21:16:18 · answer #3 · answered by crazylady97 2 · 0 0

YOU SHOULD GET PAID NOT TAXED!


The Alaska state constitution claims common heritage rights of ownership of oil and other minerals for the people of the state as a whole. Citizen dividend checks are distributed every year in Alaska out of the interest payments to an oil royalties deposit account called the Alaska Permanent Fund (APF) created in 1976 after oil was discovered on the North Slope. The APF is a public trust fund - a diversified stock, bond and real estate portfolio - into which are deposited the oil royalties received from the corporations which extract the oil from the lands of Alaska. The first citizen dividend check from the interest of the APF was issued in 1982 and was for $1000 per every person for everyone in Alaska who had resided in the state for at least one year. Annual citizen dividends have been issued every year since then, for a total of more than $23,000 per person.

In 2003, each of the nearly 600,000 Alaska US citizens (residents of Alaska for at least one year) received a check for $1,107 from the APF. The total amount dispersed was $663.2 million. The $25 billion investment fund's core experienced stock market losses which led to the dividend's decline this past year compared to the several previous years. The amount was $433 less, a 28 percent drop from the 2002 pay out of $1,540, and a 44 percent decrease from the all-time high of $1,964 in year 2000. The amount changes based on a five-year average of APF investment income derived from the bonds, stock dividends, real estate and other investments.

Alaska relies on oil for about 80 percent of its revenue and has no sales or income tax. Alaska state government is mandated to invest 25% of its oil revenue into the APF while the other 75% of oil royalty revenue is dispersed to other government funds to finance education, infrastructure and social services. If 100% of Alaska's oil royalties had been deposited into the APF, it is conceivable that the CD this year could have been about $4,400 or $17,600 for a family of four. But then there would have been no funds for roads, education and other public services and no funds available to run the state legislature - a libertarian dream fulfillment or a social and economic disaster, which one we will never know. If state services were to have been maintained while 100% of oil royalties were deposited in the APF, there would of course have been the need for income, sales and other taxes on wages and production.
Source(s):

Hoover Institution
Kuwait:

Democracy, Kuwait Style
Peter Berkowitz



It’s not that the woman question was the only issue faced by voters. From the owner and editor in chief of Kuwait’s largest newspaper, to the chief executive officer of Kuwait Petroleum Company, to the former Kuwaiti ambassador to the United States, our interlocutors argued that the Kuwaiti economy is stagnating and that the remedy is privatization. This is a difficult proposition, however, in a country where 90 to 95 percent of the labor force is employed by the government, which generally pays more than the private sector. And designing institutions to create the right incentives will be difficult in a country whose oil wealth supports a massive welfare state with no taxes that generously funds its citizens’ health, education, and housing needs.

If Alaska pays
Kuwait pays even it’s indirectly after the gulf war losses
Dubai pays
I’ve read Norway does something like this
I’ve read Nigeria is working on a fund to pay the people also

Oil is just 1 of thousands of commodities.

With all the commodities in your state.

Why can’t your state pay you?

With the resources the feds can’t they pay 50 times what Alaska pays?

The dems and reps have all the power and all the control.
Shouldn’t they bear all the responsibility for their mismanagement?

It is time to take America back for the people.

VOTE! Vote for anyone as long as they’re not a democrat or republican!

If our founding father were alive today.
They would lay siege to DC tar and feather ALL the officials.
Then hang them on the steps for all to see the consequences of screwing Americans!!

If we continue to ask for truth, then refuse to listen.
Mankind will forever, be doomed to destruction.

There must be security for all, or none are secure!
This requires losing no freedoms, only to act responsibly!

2006-06-17 10:16:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

pretty open question! Survive? Be honest and open. give them what they ask for, but ONLY what they ask for. Do not volunteer any information or documents. If you cheated, be honest up front and give them the correct number. Pay? Depends on whether your documentation can support your tax return.

2006-06-12 14:56:45 · answer #5 · answered by extra_37 4 · 0 0

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