Subscribe via RSS
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
30
Dec/09
0

What Line of Attack Can be Used to Prevent an IRS Notice of Levy On My Bank Account or Wages?

In order for the Internal Revenue Service to abide by the decrees of Congress, necessities of the law require that they firstly Certified Mail you what is called a Final Notice of Intent to Levy made according to 26 USC § 6330(a)(1) which provides in applicable part that no levy may be made on any assets or right to property of anyone unless the Secretary has warned such person in writing of their entitlement to a hearing under this section in advance of such levy being made.

26 USC § 6330(a)(2) provides that the notice required under paragraph (1) shall be handed to you personally; left at the place of abode or usual place of business of such person; or sent by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to such person’s last known address; not less than thirty days before the day of the first levy.

When you are given the notice, it is vital that your demand for the hearing be made timely. 26 USC § 6330(a)(3) specifies that the information included with the notice the IRS sends you shall include notice to you of the right to request a hearing during the 30-day period under paragraph (2).

When you take delivery of the aforementioned notice and read it you will see that 26 U.S.C. § 6330(e) provides that as soon as a CDP hearing is timely requested “the levy actions which are the subject of the requested hearing…shall be suspended for the period during which such hearing, and appeals therein, are pending…” Requesting a CDPH (Collection Due Process Hearing) is the most successful way to stop an IRS levy on a bank account or paycheck since suspension of collection activity upon such request is mandated by the law.

The IRS has a tendency to try and base your entire hearing upon what you put in that request. It is for this reason I recommend using the addendums that are part of my IRS Terminator package. I explain the importance of the addendums in the videos at www.irsterminator.com.

I have seen the IRS fax a release of levy to an employer in as little as two days subsequent to the CDPH (Collection Due Process Hearing) request being sent. There is a little trick to getting such fast action which is explained in the IRS Terminator package. This makes it possible for the employee to never miss a full paycheck and for the bank depositor to retrieve their funds.

Almost anyone can stop an levy by Federal tax authorities by timely demanding a CDPH (Collection Due Process Hearing) as provided in 26 U.S.C. § 6330(b)(1). However, if right steps are not taken to  overcome in the hearing, eventually the IRS will get around to holding the hearing and in all likelihood hold against you and move forward on the levy. The IRS Terminator package is calculated to give you the absolute best chance to prevail in your hearing.

It has happened frequently that I have come to know circumstances in which the Internal Revenue Service sent a levy to an employer or financial institution  earlier than they sent the Final Notice of Intent to Levy. It is still possible to demand a CDPH hearing in a situation such as this and get the collection action put on hold before the IRS takes your paycheck or bank deposits. There are forms in the www.irsterminator.com package whose propose is to competently request a Collection Due Process Hearing in a situation where the statutorily required notice has not been sent.

There are possibly few feelings worse than the one that happens when your financial institution or employer warns you that they have been mailed a Notice of Levy by the Federal tax authorities ordering them to keep most all of your next paycheck or deliver the funds in your bank account to them. My IRS Terminator package provides you with the knowledge you need to render the circumstances as meaningless as possible and finally succeed .

Follow me on Twitter.com/legalbear See you there. :-)

Tagged as: 26 USC § 6330(a)(1), bank account, Block IRS levy, CDP hearing, CDPH, Collection Due Process Hearing, Final Notice of Intent to Levy, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, Notice of Levy, paycheck, Stop IRS Levy
No Comments

Need Hosting?

Pages

  • Privacy Policy

Register/Login

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org
Copyright © 2010 Articles Fox · Powered by Wordpress
Lightword Theme by Andrei Luca giochi casino Go to top ↑