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NJ Lady Cannot Receive Tax Refund Because IRS Claims She Is Deceased

Jeanette Carpenter, a citizen of New Jersey, denies that she is dead. After submitting her taxes multiple times, she has been waiting for a response for weeks.

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Carpenter’s accountant got a strange response when she filed her 2020 taxes. Carpenter stated, “My Social Security number is associated with a deceased person.

“I inquired if they were confusing me with my late spouse, who died in 2009, and they responded no.”

Carpenter’s accountant submitted a second time and received the same answer. Carpenter refilled out her tax return in person and on paper at her local IRS office. She said, “What baffles me is that I work for the government.

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Carpenter reported that she was informed that everything appeared to be in order and that she would be receiving her refund in six to twelve weeks. She continues to wait, nevertheless.

She claimed there has never been a problem when she has due money.

She said, “In 2018, I owed $1,300.” “I deposited it in my account, and when I woke up two days later, the IRS had taken the $1,300 that was owed to them,” the author said.

Carpenter contacted the Social Security Administration in April, and she was successful; she was given a letter confirming her existence.

A few weeks later, she got a letter from the IRS stating that because she was deceased, her taxes couldn’t be handled.

Carpenter claimed that an IRS agent had told her over the phone that the system was just catching up since her Social Security number had been flagged as belonging to a deceased person in 2010 and that it had been tagged as such.

She submitted her return once more in person three weeks prior. She claimed that a coworker had pledged to overnight it to the government.

She hadn’t heard anything since. Carpenter said that she needs the money to make up for medical expenses related to a significant procedure that kept her out of work for four months in 2020.

A few weeks later, she received a letter from the IRS explaining that her taxes couldn’t be processed since she had passed away.

Three weeks before, she re-filed her return in person. A coworker, according to her, had promised to overnight it to the authorities.

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“Nothing exists. I’m unable to contact them. They hang up on me after a protracted hold. Carpenter stated, “I haven’t received any of my stimulus money.

“I need to see what they’re going to do with the 2020 taxes before I file my 2021 taxes.” However, I am vibrantly alive.

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However, the New York-based sister station of NEWS10’s Social Security Administration did not respond to a request for comment.

Information about tax returns cannot be disclosed by federal personnel, according to the IRS.

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