chinese_lover Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 my finacee in china heard i gotta send the orignally tax returns,she said i cant make a copy of them she read somewhere,is this true or not true,i would think a copy of all them going back for 3 or 4 yrs would be enough,let me know something,Thanks,Chris^_^ Link to comment
frank1538 Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 It's kinda hard to send in original tax returns since these are the ones that were sent to IRS. She might be referring to a signed copy, basically your file copy. Link to comment
Bob & Minglian Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 Yep, I'd have to agree with Frank. And to add to what he wrote, more and more people are filing electronic returns these days. Good photo copies must be okay. Link to comment
Mick Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 We used copies. No problem. Link to comment
Dave G. Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 We used copies. No problem.Ditto here. Not notorized. http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/mittelgrosse/medium-smiley-093.gif http://www.smiliegenerator.de/s20/smilies-8677.png (DBSM) Link to comment
Guest hakkamike Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 If you need copies you can go down to your local IRS office and they will print them out for you for free and put THEIR STAMP on them or you can call them or even print out the form and just send it in. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-fill/f4506.pdf1-800-829-1040 Later, Michael Perez Link to comment
keelec Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 Since the Federal Government already has the tax forms, why don't they just put in a little note in the "fine print" down near the signatures on one of the forms, "I authorize the use of information supplied to the IRS on my Federal Tax Forms to determine eligibility status". Also state that additional information may be supplied to supplement the decision if necessary. Thus, there would be no question about the authenticity or completeness of the records. A tax analysis could be done electronically. Hit one button, and 3 seconds later it comes back with an answer whether person is at 125% of the poverty level (counting all dependents and other exclusions filed). Of course, with a little forethought one could fudge the income tax records sent to the IRS to make it look like one should PAY MORE TAXES than would otherwise be necessary ----- Clifford ----- Link to comment
Dave G. Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 Since the Federal Government already has the tax forms, why don't they just put in a little note in the "fine print" down near the signatures on one of the forms, "I authorize the use of information supplied to the IRS on my Federal Tax Forms to determine eligibility status". Also state that additional information may be supplied to supplement the decision if necessary. Thus, there would be no question about the authenticity or completeness of the records. A tax analysis could be done electronically. Hit one button, and 3 seconds later it comes back with an answer whether person is at 125% of the poverty level (counting all dependents and other exclusions filed). Of course, with a little forethought one could fudge the income tax records sent to the IRS to make it look like one should PAY MORE TAXES than would otherwise be necessary ----- Clifford -----Keelec.... You're brilliant! Everyone wants to under-report income to the IRS. In our cases, over-report it, pay the taxes, file with CIS, then get a refund from the IRS when the numbers don't match. This takes care of people with I-134 issues. Disclaimer: This still constitutes fraud. The above is only posted as whimsical musings. http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/linie/smiley-linie-006.gif Link to comment
keelec Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 Keelec.... You're brilliant! Everyone wants to under-report income to the IRS. In our cases, over-report it, pay the taxes, file with CIS, then get a refund from the IRS when the numbers don't match. This takes care of people with I-134 issues. Disclaimer: This still constitutes fraud. The above is only posted as whimsical musings.Dave, The problem is that with the current system, it is MUCH easier to fake. Just write up a second set of tax forms. Fake a few W2 forms (what company do you want to work for?), and add everything to your packet. Make second generation Xerox copies of everything to make it look like you had copied the copies of the files you sent to the IRS. Apparently the INS never asks for a copy of the tax forms for their own records so they wouldn't have any opportunity to verify the authenticity of the forms. As I understand it, they may ask to view the forms during the interview, but they don't add them to the official immigration files. If records were retrieved from the IRS directly, it would be nearly impossible to fake (without over reporting one's tax liability which is rarely done). (Of course, most people doing international dating and marriage have already invested around $10K in the relationship, and I find it unlikely that they would have any problems meeting the 125% of the poverty level. I would assume those checks are primarily for Latin American marriages, illegal alien marriages, and perhaps student marriages, but the checks have to be applied to everyone.) ------ Clifford ----- Link to comment
Dave G. Posted November 2, 2003 Report Share Posted November 2, 2003 Keelec.... You're brilliant! Everyone wants to under-report income to the IRS. In our cases, over-report it, pay the taxes, file with CIS, then get a refund from the IRS when the numbers don't match. This takes care of people with I-134 issues. Disclaimer: This still constitutes fraud. The above is only posted as whimsical musings.Dave, The problem is that with the current system, it is MUCH easier to fake. Just write up a second set of tax forms. Fake a few W2 forms (what company do you want to work for?), and add everything to your packet. Make second generation Xerox copies of everything to make it look like you had copied the copies of the files you sent to the IRS. Apparently the INS never asks for a copy of the tax forms for their own records so they wouldn't have any opportunity to verify the authenticity of the forms. As I understand it, they may ask to view the forms during the interview, but they don't add them to the official immigration files. If records were retrieved from the IRS directly, it would be nearly impossible to fake (without over reporting one's tax liability which is rarely done). (Of course, most people doing international dating and marriage have already invested around $10K in the relationship, and I find it unlikely that they would have any problems meeting the 125% of the poverty level. I would assume those checks are primarily for Latin American marriages, illegal alien marriages, and perhaps student marriages, but the checks have to be applied to everyone.) ------ Clifford -----I know I didn't provide W-2s. Not a bad idea to avoid fraud. I even submitted my entire life's history with social security (I'm anal, remember?). But, because or gov is so disfunctional, one hand never knows what the other is doing. No way DoS could access IRS records. Unless, of course, they add that to the investigative process. Yup...one more agency to wait for. OMG...what am I doing?? Please....all CIS trolls -- disregard. It's a very bad idea. http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/traurig/sad-smiley-067.gif Link to comment
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