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IRS Beefs Up With Addition Of More Gun-Wielding Agents

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 15: The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building stands on April 15, 2019 in Washington, DC. April 15 is the deadline in the United States for residents to file their income tax returns. (Photo by Zach Gibson/Getty Images)

A watchdog overseeing the IRS has revealed that the agency is hiring 5,582 tax enforcers this year, although it dismissed as “unfounded” media reports claiming the tax agency is hiring “87,000-armed enforcement agents” because only a fraction of the new hires will carry guns.

The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA), which is the watchdog overseeing the IRS, disclosed the agency’s hiring plans for 2024 in an April 3 report on how the IRS is spending its $78 billion funding boost.

The IRS got roughly $79.4 billion in supplemental funding when President Joe Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 into law, though Congress later clawed back around $1.4 billion.

Still, even with the clawback, the massive cash infusion represented a roughly 600-percent increase over the IRS’ prior year budget.

Republicans warned at the time that the money would be used to hire an “army of 87,000” tax enforcers who would come down hard on ordinary Americans and squeeze them for “every last penny.”
As claims of the “army of 87,000” enforcers captured the spotlight, the IRS went to great pains to push back on this notion. Various Biden administration officials insisted audits wouldn’t rise for Americans making less than $400,000 per year, even though the very same watchdog—TIGTA—warned that this promise could be hard to keep because the IRS uses outdated income thresholds and has “no way to identify the complete population of taxpayers that meet the criterion of $400,000.”
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