IRS Relief is only a phone call away,
call and talk personally with Scott.
An Offer in Compromise is a legitimate settlement option on your IRS tax debt. However, only about 1% of our clients qualify for an OIC. This is the biggest area of fraud committed by IRS resolution companies on vulnerable taxpayers. Any company that uses the phrase, “pennies on the dollar,” as their primary approach to settling your IRS tax debt will cheat you.
J K Harris, who claims to be the biggest IRS resolution company in the country, is and example of what I am talking about. Most of their clients thought they were getting an “offer” negotiated on their behalf to settle for “pennies on the dollar.”
Good luck getting any refund from a company pushing “pennies on the dollar,” settlements. Joining a class action lawsuit can be very discouraging. A class action lawsuit against JK Harris was approved by Charleston County Circuit Court Judge Perry M. Buckner III involving JK Harris vs 68,000 former clients on July 17, 2007.
The award was for $6 Million dollars less the cut taken by the law firm representing the plaintiffs. If the amount actually returned to former clients was $4 million, that would represent and average refund of $58 dollars per client. If the average client paid JK Harris $2,500, that would amount to 2 cents on the dollar.
The worse part is that the repayment will be over a four year period. That means the average client would get back $14.50 each year for four years. The only one who got an Offer in Compromise in this case was J K Harris. The reason why the award was so low was that J K Harris would have been put into bankruptcy to pay any more than 2 cents on the dollar.
The biggest misconception about offers is that most people believe this is a quick and easy process that you just call them up and send a check to the IRS. It doesn’t work that way. You must file a formal Offer in Compromise form 665, and the process can take up to a year to be accepted and longer if you have to go to IRS Appeals.
IRS Relief is only a phone call away.
Call and talk personally with Scott.
So what is a true testimonial? There are two types that you should only have confidence in.
The first is a letter from the IRS stating what the settlement was.
The second type of testimonial is to actually talk to a client that had a similar problem that we recently resolved.