IRS Investigating American Express Sales Pitches (wsj.com) 3
The Internal Revenue Service is investigating American Express over a questionable tax break that it pitched to clients, WSJ reported Friday, citing people familiar with the matter. From the report: The civil investigation has been under way for a few months, these people said. The Wall Street Journal reported in November that AmEx salespeople touted a tax break based on a shaky interpretation of tax law. The pitch was part of a strategy to persuade business owners to sign up for costly payment services. AmEx previously acknowledged, in response to the November story, that some members of its U.S. sales organization "failed to uphold our values and had positioned certain products inappropriately, specifically with respect to tax benefits." An AmEx spokesman said this week that "we have already taken a number of actions to change products, policies and personnel and are continuing to cooperate with our regulators and government agencies. "As we said in November, we engaged an external law firm to conduct an investigation of our small business sales practices in the U.S.," he added. AmEx "will take further steps as appropriate." AmEx previously said that it discontinued wire services associated with the pitch. These had been available to a wide range of companies, according to people familiar with the matter.
I received this pitch (Score:5, Informative)
. We thought this was elaborate, error prone and also the tax benefit seemed very novel and shady, so we kept our Amex business card.
. Now, unsurprisingly, it looks like that blew up..the problem is, they've been doing this for years (the call I had was in August 2020), and the people behind it have probably already collected their bonuses.
Re: (Score:2)
But one can imagine running the entire company payroll through a card and earn cash back and miles and benefits on personal account. At that scale even IRS would object. Personal use of employer paid stuff is a gray are
Re: (Score:3)