I paid over 24k to a company for what was supposed to be for debt consolidation. Years later i found out that the company, LPG Financial did nothing with my det along with many others and just pocketed our monies. They have since filed for bankruptcy. As such I (along with many others) are out all of the monies that were paid and still left with the original debt and lawsuits associated with that debt. Is there anything in the current tax laws that will allow for this type of scam/situation to be factored into income tax filings.
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@kklein2092 wrote:
Is there anything in the current tax laws that will allow for this type of scam/situation to be factored into income tax filings.
That does not appear to be the case since it sounds as if you paid for a service and the company you paid simply became insolvent.
That's complicated. If it is theft, the answer is no, because theft losses are disallowed for 2018-2025 unless in connection with a declared disaster. If it is a non-business bad debt, it is a capital loss you can deduct against other capital gains.
https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc453
https://www.grfcpa.com/resource/bad-debts-what-losses-can-you-deduct-and-when/
The problem is that the IRS can be skeptical of bad debt losses. There was a tax court case over forged paintings, that turned on whether it was theft (fraud) or just a bad investment, and the ruling was that for it to be theft, there must be a thief who benefits.
So you may need to look to see if this was a legitimate debt reduction company that went out of business, or if it was a scam all along. If it was a scam all along, the theft deduction is not allowed.
@Opus 17 wrote:
.......If it is theft.....
Theft is the unlawful taking of property or money from another with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of that property.
This is not theft since @kklein2092 voluntarily paid the firm for services to be rendered. In order for it to be theft, the initial taking had to be unlawful with the intent to provide no services at the outset; that does not appear to be the case.
@tagteam wrote:
@Opus 17 wrote:
.......If it is theft.....
Theft is the unlawful taking of property or money from another with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of that property.
This is not theft since @kklein2092 voluntarily paid the firm for services to be rendered. In order for it to be theft, the initial taking had to be unlawful with the intent to provide no services at the outset; that does not appear to be the case.
Agreed. However, @kklein2092 used the term "scam", and we don't know the history of the company, whether they have been the subject of lawsuits or prosecutions, etc.
If it is not theft, then the non-business bad debt deduction probably applies.
@Opus 17 wrote:If it is not theft, then the non-business bad debt deduction probably applies.
Yes, that would be my thought. Agreed.
However,
The non-business bad debt deduction is taken in the year that you determine the debt is uncollectible. You mentioned this happened several years ago. Normally, the company declaring bankruptcy could be used as the date the debt is declared non-collectible. Or, if you are listed as a creditor, you might use the date when the bankruptcy case was closed and it was confirmed that you would not recover anything.
If the debt became non-collectible in a past year, you would have to file an amended return for that year to declare the debt and take the deduction. You can deduct capital losses like this up to the amount of your capital gains plus $3000. Any remaining loss is carried forward to the next year. So, if the debt became non-collectible in 2021 (for example), you would have to file an amended 2021 return. Then if you have a loss to carry over, you would file an amended 2022 return and claim the loss. And if you still had a loss carryover would include it on your 2023 return, and so on.
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