Congratulations, you made it!
You made it through another April Fools’ Day, that is, not another tax season. The IRS Commissioner must have seen his shadow during this Groundhog Day of a year because we still have six more weeks of filing returns ahead of us.
To keep you entertained while you make that final push to the finish line, here are a few past pranks with a tax theme, from around the world.
IRS shares data with Nigerian prince: The nonprofit Tax Foundation’s 2016 prank detailing an IRS plan to outsource its data security came on the heels of two IRS data breaches involving the “Get Transcript” program and e-file PINs, which compromised the personal information of more than 800,000 taxpayers.
£2,030 refund for British taxpayers: In 1996, an advertisement appeared in The London Times which featured an apology from Britain’s Conservative Party and asked readers to contact party headquarters for a £2,030 tax refund. There was just one catch: The fake ad was paid for by members of the Labour Party.
Norway’s 10% tax rebate: Norway’s Aftenposten (The Evening Post) published an article claiming that taxpayers would have to file again due to a data company error. The 1971 article, which included a photo of a puzzled employee trying to make sense of a scrambled string of data tape, said anyone who re-filed by the end of the day would receive a 10% rebate. And to think, when the IRS has computer problems in 2018, they only offered a one-day extension.


Austin Lewis is the biggest music fan at Spidell, but for the first time since 1998 he’s had to survive a year plus without attending any concerts. That leaves more time for other hobbies like hiking, and here he is in Yosemite in the fall.




Diane Fuller loves to read, cook, and go to Ketchum/Sun Valley, Idaho, as many times as possible during the year with her family including grandkids and dogs.