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U.S. widens probe of Jackson Hewitt

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From the Associated Press

The federal government has widened its probe into whether the nation’s No. 2 tax-return preparer helped customers file fraudulent returns to get bigger refunds.

One large franchisee of Jackson Hewitt Tax Services Inc. was accused of fraud two months ago, and the company hired a former Internal Revenue Service commissioner to review the allegations.

In a regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission late last week, Jackson Hewitt disclosed that the corporation itself and all of its franchisee and company-owned stores were being investigated by the IRS. The Parsippany, N.J.-based company has 5,778 franchisee-operated offices and owns an additional 723 offices nationwide.

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IRS spokesman Bruce Friedland said he could not confirm any investigation. A spokesman for the Justice Department also declined to comment.

Jackson Hewitt spokeswoman Sheila Cort said the company was cooperating with the Justice Department and the IRS.

She said the company planned to complete the internal review quickly and make any necessary changes in time for the 2008 tax-filing season.

The Justice Department on April 3 filed civil injunction lawsuits seeking to halt fraudulent practices at more than 125 Jackson Hewitt retail tax preparation stores in and around Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta and Raleigh-Durham, N.C.

The agency said one of the two dozen defendants named in the lawsuits, Farrukh Sohail of Atlanta, owned all or part of the five corporations running those franchises. The others are workers or managers at those offices, which filed more than 105,000 federal income tax returns in 2006.

The government alleged Sohail and the other defendants created an environment “in which fraudulent tax return preparation is encouraged and flourishes.” The lawsuits accuse them of filing false returns that claim refunds based on phony W-2 forms, taking deductions for fabricated businesses and business expenses, “massive fraud” related to claiming the federal earned income tax credit, and other abuses.

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