Tax fraud gangsters celebrate their crimes in song

August 23, 2015

Tax fraud has become so profitable that it has replaced drug dealing for many gangs nationwide.

Earlier this month, alleged gang members on both coasts — 32 in Long Beach, California, and 14 in Elizabeth, New Jersey — were indicted by federal prosecutors on a variety of tax crime charges.

It's not a new development. Years ago, Florida criminals acknowledged that they shifted to stealing tax refunds because the crime was less dangerous and more lucrative than dealing drugs.

If caught by authorities, though, tax crimes still carry a hefty penalty. Just ask the dude who's spending a record 27 years in federal jail for the crime.

But arrest is always a possibility in any illegal endeavor, so the criminal conversion continues.

Tax corridos: In fact, tax fraud has taken on such a large role in gangs that it's sparked a growing number of songs celebrating the riches to be made from the crime. 

J-Creek_Tom G_tax fraud Drop Hoe songThe tax tunes essentially are the hip-hop or rap equivalents of the narcocorridos that document and often glorify the crimes of Mexican drug cartels.

In the tax versions, the songs exalt the riches being made off of identity theft and fake 1040 filings, as well as lament the problems with this particular type of crime.

Drop hoe woes: One problematic issue apparently is not being able to find enough accomplices, known in the illicit business as drop hoes, to receive the fraudulent tax refunds.

That's the subject of the video by J-Creek and Tom G.

Not to go all RIAA on you, but "Drop Hoe" has explicit lyrics. You can get an idea of how explicit from Brian Krebs' transcription at his Krebs on Security blog.

I haven't heard of any of the tax fraud corridos breaking into the more mainstream music world. But if tax crimes continue to escalate, you never know.

IRS facing more potential tax fraud: The Internal Revenue Service itself has been victim of identity theft hackers. Earlier this year, its Get Transcript online app was breached.

Now, things have gone from bad to worse. The IRS announced that instead of 114,000 possible tax fraud victims, the number of tax ID theft hack victims has reached 334,000.

The one tiny bit of good news is that the IRS is continually refining the ways it fights its ID theft. Efforts the agency plans to have in place by the 2016 filing season include more sharing of info with government and tax industry sources, new restrictions on access to deceased taxpayers' data and limiting multiple refund accounts.

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