Fraudulent Durable Goods and Charity Vehicle Donations-Investigations
There are many dealings that encourage the IRS to act and primary among them is people taking advantage of charity deductions for tax purposes. In the case of durable goods or non-cash donations to charity, reports issued in late 2003 found that over half a billion dollars was falling through the IRS’s proverbial tax fingertips. In an endeavor to stem this revenue bleeding, new rules took effect in 2005, largely due to just a single scathing report from the US General Accounting Office (GAO) in late 2003.
Of course, this report was the first of its kind to actually center exclusively on automobile and vehicle donations to charity in relation to tax deductions. And what it found stunned the IRS and the Senate Finance Committee that it was delivered to. Indeed, a quick response was garnered from the IRS to publicly concur with the recommendations of the report that called for rule updates and greater oversight of vehicle donations to charity.
It is fascinating to note that the timing of this report was just a year after an influential and scathing article on this very topic appeared in the Washington Post. Though the increased incidence of ads cajoling people to donate their car to charity certainly warranted inspection by someone, whether an employee of the GAO saw this, or a constituent of one of the Senators on the Finance Committee, is not known.
Regardless, the report, entitled, “Vehicle Donations: Benefits to Charities and Donors, but Limited Program Oversight,” found some glaring problems with the system of automotive donations to charity and tax deductions, even when taxpayers followed the letter of the law when determining their allowable deduction.
For instance, the average deductible represented only between 1-5% of the actual monies accepted by the charity in most cases. The rest of this money was lost by selling the vehicle as quickly as possible on the wholesale market, often taking in less than 10% of the automobile’s value according to even conservative estimates by valuation services such as the Kelly Blue Book.
Of course, part of the confusion arises from the generally unsatisfactory condition of many donations - a condition that was found to be exasperated by offers of free towing of any vehicle with a free and clear title. In fact, most donation organizations (whether operating as a profitable business or non-profit charity) will tow cars as a matter of course, whether they run or not. In contrast, the Kelly Blue Book rating of “poor” still requires the car to move under its own power.
The very prevalent use of third-party donation organizations that represented various charitable organizations (sometimes several) caused a great deal of concern, too. It was found that on average, between 60-70% of the relatively paltry revenues from wholesale market sales was then eaten up by the overhead of the facilitating organization that was operated as a for-profit business enterprise over 95% of the time.
Even more disconcerting, many of these third party organizations were found to be engaging in fraudulent or at least shoddy bookkeeping - often lumping all their expenses for a given sale into a single unlikely category. Sometimes, it was found that in many cases the charity that some such companies represented wasn’t even legitimate, making the practice of taking a tax deduction from such a gift to “charity” technically illegal.
That said, despite the large number of advertisements found on TV, radio and websites, less than a single percent of tax returns filed in 2000 included a vehicle donation to charity. Of course, in a country as large as the United States, that still means that over 700,000 tax returns had itemized deductions for vehicle donations to charity. By claiming the “fair market value” of the cars in question rather than the actual sale price, just about each and every one of the nearly three-quarters of a million returns deducted a value that was, on average, 90% higher than the actual revenues received at auction.
It comes as no revelation to anyone that the IRS acted the very next year, especially given the infidelity of public trust that predatory for-profit enterprises represented when invoking the name of charity to seek donations from unsuspecting Americans who were just trying to do the right thing.
Tags: auto donations to charity, car donation and taxes, donating a car
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November 15th, 2008 at 9:33 pm
Fraudulent Charity Vehicle Donations-Investigations | Car Donation Charity Information…
Half a billion dollars use to fall through the IRS tax hands, via the methods used for charity vehicle donations. The report to the General Accounting Office, entitled, “Vehicle Donations: Benefits to Charities and Donors, but Limited Program Oversig…