Anonymous wrote:I know I screwed up and a lot I have excuses reasonable and unreasonable so hearing “you should have done it” won’t help me. I know. I had a nanny a few years ago that was legally here but not a citizen. I paid her cash, always thinking we were leaving the city and it was temporary. I asked her about the correct forms and Care.com and printed out the forms and for her own excuses too and my lack of checking, those forms were never done. Due to my job, I need to back pay, I need to fix this, I can’t sleep, I keep thinking the IRS will come and put me in jail. I know I need to pay taxes and penalties and am willing to pay it so I can have a clean slate and not be delinquent. I don’t know the nanny’s social security just name and address. Please help. Have any of you done backpay? Should I hire a lawyer I can’t really afford? Any advice on how I can fix this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - it’s an in-depth clearance and I’m done not fixing this. I should have paid the taxes then I just want this fixed. I contacted a CPA and will start there to amend. Not in contact with her any longer. I want to say this was a situation where we had offers in on houses and letters to supervisors telling them we were moving and things kept falling through and we lived out of boxes for months, this was supposed to be a “watch the baby while we pack and move” and became a nanny situation. But excuses don’t matter for IRS. Seriously use this as a cautionary tale for anyone considering not paying, my livelihood is at stake now.
Anonymous wrote:What do they ask during the security clearance? Do they look for probes , talking to neighbors, looking through your finances? I would start there. Figure out everything they will know of you. Then how much will they ask neighbors friends....
If they will come and talk to your neighbors, which I think they do, you definitely shouldn’t lie. One thing you could do is call her an occasional babysitter and just try to stick to the lowest income she made from you. Also, only a certain amount of money needs to be taxed, if it’s under a certain amount nanny doesn’t have to file taxes. So first I’d think about all of these issues, then you can start thinking about how to solve it and who to contact.
Do you still talk to your babysitter just in case, or you don’t have contact to her anymore?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just contact the irs. If you go to them, explain the situation and ask to set up a payment plan, they’ll help you. They only through people in jail who refuse to pay after they prosecute them.
I'm a tax attorney and this is no true. You can go to jail for multiple reasons, and refusing to pay is not the only one. There is indeed a criminal section relating to payroll taxes, which is what OP owes. However, I doubt OP is going to jail but her security clearance is a real concern. You're going to have a really hard time contacting the IRS for anything right now, but I would hire someone to help you.
Anonymous wrote:Just contact the irs. If you go to them, explain the situation and ask to set up a payment plan, they’ll help you. They only through people in jail who refuse to pay after they prosecute them.