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IRS Glitch Leads To Thousands Of Foreign Workers Getting Stimulus Checks: Report

Sign outside the Internal Revenue Service building in downtown Washington, DC on December 26, 2014.. Shutterstock

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Jason Hopkins Immigration and politics reporter
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A glitch within the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has reportedly led to as many as thousands of foreign nationals receiving coronavirus stimulus checks intended for U.S. residents.

Many of the $1,200 stimulus checks to Americans coping with the economic downturn also went to foreign workers, many of whom are living overseas, according to a report from Politico. Allegations of misdirected coronavirus funds come from tax consultants and even recipients themselves.

Many of the unintended recipients are racing to spend the money before the IRS realizes what went wrong.

“We were contacted by a lot of our clients all of a sudden, on the one day when they started hitting their accounts or that the checks started going out, asking what to do,” Donna Kepley, president of the tax firm Arctic International, told Politico.

The tax firm has spoken with “dozens of clients” in the past days.

Stimulus Checks With President Trump's Name Sent Out To Americans

A letter bearing the signature of U.S. President Donald Trump was sent to people who received a coronavirus economic stimulus payment as part of the Cares Act April 29, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

“And so we had to try to figure out how to return it, which is not easy,” Keply said, and added that “thousands” of foreign individuals likely received checks in April.

Young workers who have visited the United States in the past couple of years, many of them gone well before the coronavirus pandemic began, were shocked to discover $1,200 checks directly deposited into their banks. The ones who spoke publicly about the issue said they wanted to return the money out of fear of reprimand, but were unable to reach the IRS.

Politico spoke to three student visa holders who unexpectedly found an extra stack in their bank account.

“One day I just saw my account and I had 1,200 bucks without even requesting anything,” a French citizen who finished a graduate program at the University of Toledo in 2018 said about the surprise. “I knew they were planning to give stimulus payments but I didn’t know when it was happening.”

How did this glitch occur?

The incorrect payments are believed to be a result of a common tax-filing glitch, specifically with foreign college students on F-1 and J-1 exchange visas. These foreign students, who are able to work summer jobs, typically use TurboTax or similar e-filing services without realizing that these programs are intended for U.S. residents.

Consequently, there are many temporary workers who file incorrect tax forms each year. The IRS usually does not catch this error because Social Security numbers assigned to non-immigrant workers are the same number of digits as those assigned to U.S. citizens — making both sets look identical. (RELATED: New York Man Arrested For Stealing More Than $12,000 In Coronavirus Stimulus Checks From Mailboxes)

While this usually doesn’t cause a problem during tax season, this year became a blunder when the U.S. government apparently mistook many foreign workers as eligible for these one-time stimulus checks.

The Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation.

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