A Nebraska tax preparer has been charged for orchestrating a multi‑year income tax fraud scheme that generated hundreds of thousands of dollars in fraudulent refunds by manipulating client filings and fabricating deductions. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Nebraska and the Nebraska Department of Revenue, the defendant submitted false federal and state income tax returns on behalf of dozens of clients — many of whom were unaware their information was being misused.
Investigators allege the preparer inflated itemized deductions, fabricated business losses, and falsely claimed education, energy, and fuel tax credits to maximize refunds. In several cases, returns were filed without client review or authorization, while refund payments were routed to bank accounts controlled by the preparer before partial amounts were passed along to taxpayers.
The scheme began to unravel after state tax officials identified a pattern of unusually high refunds associated with a single preparer identification number. Data analysis revealed repeated use of identical expense amounts across unrelated filers, overlapping dependent information, and a high volume of amended returns claiming additional credits shortly after original filings were processed.
Further investigation found that multiple taxpayers were later audited or assessed penalties for returns they did not recognize. Interviews confirmed that many had provided only basic wage information and were unaware of the additional schedules, deductions, and credits attached to their filings.
“This case highlights how trusted access can be exploited when controls fail,” said a Nebraska Department of Revenue spokesperson. “Fraudulent preparers don’t just steal from tax programs — they expose taxpayers to audits, penalties, and long‑term financial harm.”
Authorities also allege the defendant used stolen identities to file returns for individuals who had not authorized tax preparation services at all, directing refunds to prepaid debit cards and shell accounts. Total losses across federal and Nebraska tax programs are estimated to exceed $900,000.
The case underscores the growing importance of preparer risk scoring, cross‑return analytics, and identity verification measures to detect anomalies before refunds are issued. The defendant faces multiple counts of wire fraud, aiding and assisting in the preparation of false tax returns, and aggravated identity theft.
Today’s Fraud of the Day is based on reporting from the U.S. Department of Justice and the Nebraska Department of Revenue regarding income tax fraud.

