Popular shared stories on NewsBlur.
2791 stories
·
63485 followers

The IRS Is Building a Vast System to Share Millions of Taxpayers’ Data With ICE

1 Share

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

The Internal Revenue Service is building a computer program that would give deportation officers unprecedented access to confidential tax data.

ProPublica has obtained a blueprint of the system, which would create an “on demand” process allowing Immigration and Customs Enforcement to obtain the home addresses of people it’s seeking to deport.

Last month, in a previously undisclosed dispute, the acting general counsel at the IRS, Andrew De Mello, refused to turn over the addresses of 7.3 million taxpayers sought by ICE. In an email obtained by ProPublica, De Mello said he had identified multiple legal “deficiencies” in the agency’s request.

Two days later, on June 27, De Mello was forced out of his job, people familiar with the dispute said. The addresses have not yet been released to ICE. De Mello did not respond to requests for comment, and the administration did not address questions sent by ProPublica about his departure.

The Department of Government Efficiency began pushing the IRS to provide taxpayer data to immigration agents soon after President Donald Trump took office. The tax agency’s acting general counsel refused and was replaced by De Mello, who Trump administration officials viewed as more willing to carry out the president’s agenda. Soon after, the Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s parent agency, and the IRS negotiated a “memorandum of understanding” that included specific legal guardrails to safeguard taxpayers’ private information.

In his email, De Mello said ICE’s request for millions of records did not meet those requirements, which include having a written assurance that each taxpayer whose address is being sought was under active criminal investigation.

“There’s just no way ICE has 7 million real criminal investigations, that’s a fantasy,” said a former senior IRS official who had been advising the agency on this issue. The demands from the DHS were “unprecedented,” the official added, saying the agency was pressing the IRS to do what amounted to “a big data dump.”

In the past, when law enforcement sought IRS data to support its investigations, agencies would give the IRS the full legal name of the target, an address on file and an explanation of why the information was relevant to a criminal inquiry. Such requests rarely involved more than a dozen people at a time, former IRS officials said.

Danny Werfel, IRS commissioner during the Biden administration, said the privacy laws allowing federal investigators to obtain taxpayer data have never “been read to open the door to the sharing of thousands, tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands of tax records for a broad-based enforcement initiative.”

A spokesperson for the White House said the planned use of IRS data was legal and a means of fulfilling Trump’s campaign pledge to carry out mass deportations of “illegal criminal aliens.”

Taxpayer data is among the most confidential in the federal government and is protected by strict privacy laws, which have historically limited its transfer to law enforcement and other government agencies. Unauthorized disclosure of taxpayer return information is a felony that can carry a penalty of up to five years in prison.

The system that the IRS is now creating would give ICE automated access to home addresses en masse, limiting the ability of IRS officials to consider the legality of transfers. IRS insiders who reviewed a copy of the blueprint said it could result in immigration agents raiding wrong or outdated addresses.

“If this program is implemented in its current form, it’s extremely likely that incorrect addresses will be given to DHS and individuals will be wrongly targeted,” said an IRS engineer who examined the blueprints and who, like other officials, spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

The dispute that ended in De Mello’s ouster was the culmination of months of pressure on the IRS to turn over massive amounts of data in ways that would redefine the relationship between the agency and law enforcement and reduce taxpayers’ privacy, records and interviews show.

In one meeting in late March between senior IRS and DHS officials, a top ICE official made a suggestion: Why doesn’t Homeland Security simply provide the name and state of its targets and have the IRS return the addresses of everyone who matches that criteria?

The IRS lawyers were stunned. They feared they could face criminal liability if they handed over the addresses of individuals who were not under a criminal investigation. The conversation and news of deeper collaboration with ICE so disturbed career staff that it led to a series of departures in late March and early April across the IRS’ legal, IT and privacy offices.

They were “pushing the boundaries of the law,” one official said. “Everyone at IRS felt the same way.”

The Blueprint

The technical blueprint obtained by ProPublica shows that engineers at the agency are preparing to give DHS what it wants: a system that enables massive automated data sharing. The goal is to launch the new system before the end of July, two people familiar with the matter said.

The DHS effort to obtain IRS data comes as top immigration enforcement leaders face escalating White House pressure to deport some 3,000 people per day, according to reports.

One federal agent tasked with assisting ICE on deportations said recent operations have been hamstrung by outdated addresses. Better information could dramatically speed up arrests. “Some of the leads that they were giving us were old,” said the agent, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the press. “They’re like from two administrations ago.”

In early March, immigrants rights groups sued the IRS hoping to block the plan, arguing that the memorandum of understanding between DHS and the IRS is illegal. But a judge in early May ruled against them, saying the broader agreement complied with Section 6103, the existing law regulating IRS data sharing. That opened the door for engineers to begin building the system.

The judge did not address the technical blueprint, which didn’t exist at the time of the ruling. But the case is pending, which means the new system could still come under legal review.

Until now, little was known about the push and pull between the two agencies or the exact technical mechanics behind the arrangement.

The plan has been shrouded in secrecy even within the IRS, with details of its development withheld from regular communications. Several IRS engineers and lawyers have avoided working on the project out of concerns about personal legal risk.

Asked about the new system, a spokesperson for IRS parent agency the Treasury Department said the memorandum of understanding, often called an MOU, “has been litigated and determined to be a lawful application of Section 6103, which provides for information sharing by the IRS in precise circumstances associated with law enforcement requests.”

At a time when Trump is making threats to deport not only undocumented immigrants but also U.S. citizens, the scope of information-sharing with the IRS could continue to grow, according to documents reviewed by ProPublica and sources familiar with the matter: DHS has been looking for ways to expand the agreement that could allow Homeland Security officials to seek IRS data on Americans being investigated for various crimes.

Last month, an ICE attorney proposed updating the MOU to authorize new data requests on people “associated with criminal activities which may include United States citizens or lawful permanent residents,” according to a document seen by ProPublica. The status of this proposal is unclear. De Mello, at the time, rejected it and called for senior Treasury Department leadership to personally sign off on such a significant change.

The White House described DHS’ work with the IRS as a good-faith effort to identify and deport those who are living in the country illegally.

“ProPublica continues to degrade their already terrible reputation by suggesting we should turn a blind eye to criminal illegal aliens present in the United States for the sake of trying to collect tax payments from them,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement after receiving questions about the blueprint from ProPublica.

She pointed to the April MOU as giving the government the authority to create the new system and added, “This isn’t a surveillance system. … It’s part of President Trump’s promise to carry out the mass deportation of criminal illegal aliens — the promise that the American people elected him on and he is committed to fulfilling.”

In a separate statement, a senior DHS official also cited the court’s approval of the MOU, saying that it “outlines a process to ensure that sensitive taxpayer information is protected while allowing law enforcement to effectively pursue criminal violations.”

How the System Works

The new system would represent a sea change, allowing law enforcement to request enormous swaths of confidential data in bulk through an automated, computerized process.

The system, according to the blueprint and interviews with IRS engineers, would work like this:

First, DHS would send the IRS a spreadsheet containing the names and previous addresses of the people it’s targeting. The request would include the date of a final removal order, a relevant criminal statute ICE is using to investigate the individual, and the tax period for which information is sought. If DHS fails to include any of this information, the system would reject the request.

The system then attempts to match the information provided by the DHS to a specific taxpayer identification number, which is the primary method by which the IRS identifies an individual in its databases.

If the system makes a match, it accesses the individual’s associated tax file and pulls the address listed during the most recent tax period. Then the system would produce a new spreadsheet enriched with taxpayer data that contains DHS’ targets’ last known addresses. The spreadsheet would include a record of names rejected for lack of required information and names for which it could not make a match.

Tax and privacy experts say they worry about how such a powerful yet crude platform could make dangerous mistakes. Because the search starts with a name instead of a taxpayer identification number, it risks returning the address of an innocent person with the same name as or a similar address to that of one of ICE’s targets. The proposed system assumes the data provided by DHS is accurate and that each targeted individual is the subject of a valid criminal investigation. In effect, the IRS has no way to independently check the bases of these requests, experts told ProPublica.

In addition, the blueprint does not limit the amount of data that can be transferred or how often DHS can request it. The system could easily be expanded to acquire all the information the IRS holds on taxpayers, said technical experts and IRS engineers who reviewed the documents. By shifting a single parameter, the program could return more information than just a target’s address, said an engineer familiar with the plan, including employer and familial relationships.

Engineers based at IRS offices in Lanham, Maryland, and Dallas are developing the blueprint.

“Gone Back on Its Word”

For decades, the American government has encouraged everyone who makes an income in the U.S. to pay taxes — regardless of immigration status — with an implicit promise that their information would be protected. Now that same data may be used to locate and deport noncitizens.

“For years, the IRS has told immigrants that it only cares that they pay their taxes,” said Nandan Joshi, an attorney with the Public Citizen Litigation Group, which is seeking to block the data-sharing agreement in federal court. “By agreeing to share taxpayer data with ICE on a mass basis, the IRS has gone back on its word.”

The push to share IRS data with DHS emerged while Elon Musk’s DOGE reshaped the engineering staff of the IRS. Sam Corcos, a Silicon Valley startup founder with no government experience, pushed out more than 50 IRS engineers and restructured the agency’s engineering priorities while he was the senior DOGE official at the agency. He later became chief information officer at Treasury. He has also led a separate IRS effort to create a master database using products from Silicon Valley giant Palantir Technologies, enabling the government to link and search large swaths of data.

Corcos didn’t respond to a request for comment. The White House said DOGE is not part of the DHS-IRS pact.

Sen. Ron Wyden, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Committee on Finance, which oversees the IRS, told ProPublica the system being built was ripe for abuse. It “would allow an outside agency unprecedented access to IRS records for reasons that have nothing to do with tax administration, opening the door to endless fishing expeditions,” he said.

The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, the department’s internal watchdog, is already probing efforts by Trump and DOGE to obtain private taxpayer data and other sensitive information, ProPublica reported in April.

The Trump administration continues to add government agencies to its deportation drive.

DOGE and DHS are also working to build a national citizenship database, NPR reported last month. The database links information from the Social Security Administration and the DHS, ostensibly for the purpose of allowing state and local election officials to verify U.S. citizenship.

And in May, a senior Treasury Department official directed 250 IRS criminal investigative agents to help deportation operations, a significant shift for two agencies that historically have had separate missions.

McKenzie Funk contributed reporting, and Kirsten Berg and Alex Mierjeski contributed research.

Read the whole story
acdha
4 hours ago
reply
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

How Android phones became an earthquake warning system - Ars Technica

1 Comment

Of course, the trick is that you only send out the warning if there's an actual earthquake, and not when a truck is passing by. Here, the sheer volume of Android phones sold plays a key role. As a first pass, AEA can simply ignore events that aren't picked up by a lot of phones in the same area. But we also know a lot about the patterns of shaking that earthquakes produce. Different waves travel at different speeds, cause different types of ground motion, and may be produced at different intensities as the earthquake progresses.

So, the people behind AEA also include a model of earthquakes and seismic wave propagation, and check whether the pattern seen in phones' accelerometers is consistent with that model. It only triggers an alert when there's widespread phone activity that matches the pattern expected for an earthquake.

Raising awareness

In practical terms, AEA is distributed as part of the core Android software, and is set to on by default, so it is active in most Android phones. It starts monitoring when the phone has been stationary for a little while, checking for acceleration data that's consistent with the P or S waves produced by earthquakes. If it gets a match, it forwards the information along with some rough location data (to preserve privacy) to Google servers. Software running on those servers then performs the positional analysis to see if the waves are widespread enough to have been triggered by an earthquake.

If so, it estimates the size and location, and uses that information to estimate the ground motion that will be experienced in different locations. Based on that, AEA sends out one of two alerts, either "be aware" or "take action." The "be aware" alert is similar to a standard Android notification, but it plays a distinctive sound and is sent to users further from the epicenter. In contrast, the "take action" warning that's sent to those nearby will display one of two messages in the appropriate language, either "Protect yourself" or "Drop, cover, and hold on." It ignores any do-not-disturb settings, takes over the entire screen, and also plays a distinct noise.

Read the whole story
acdha
4 hours ago
reply
“Of those roughly 1,300 events that triggered alerts, only three were false positives. One of those was triggered by a different system sending an alert that vibrated a lot of phones, something that should be relatively easy to compensate for in software. The other two were both due to thunderstorms, where heavy thunder caused widespread vibrations centered on a specific location. This led the team to better model acoustic events, which should prevent something similar from happening in the future.”
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

The Astronomer CEO's Coldplay Concert Fiasco Is Emblematic of Our Social Media Surveillance Dystopia

1 Share

Advertisement

Facial recognition and crowdsourced social media investigations are constantly being used not just on cringe CEOs, but on random people who are simply existing in public.

Read the whole story
acdha
4 hours ago
reply
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

GSA tech services arm violated hiring rules, misused recruitment incentives, watchdog says | FedScoop

1 Comment

The General Services Administration’s Technology Transformation Services violated federal hiring requirements and mismanaged recruitment incentives, according to the agency’s inspector general. 

In a report published Monday, the GSA’s Office of Inspector General determined that the hiring process for TTS, a component of the GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service (FAS), violated the merit-based hiring rules for federal workers and raised “serious concerns about fairness and accountability.” 

“Merit-based hiring is the cornerstone of a fair and effective federal workforce,” the report stated. “It ensures that all candidates have an equal opportunity to compete and are selected based on their qualifications. TTS deviated from merit system principles in its hiring and workforce management practices, resulting in noncompliance.” 

TTS, the GSA’s tech services arm, is primarily made up of IT professionals. The report followed an audit of the division’s hiring actions during a three-year period that ended in March 2025. 

According to the report, TTS improperly used Direct-Hire Authority (DHA), which is a less competitive hiring process used for hiring in “emergencies or extraordinary circumstances.” 

When DHA is used, federal agencies can speed up the hiring process by eliminating competing rating and ranking practices, which include veterans’ preference claims. 

The Office of Personnel Management must approve agencies’ use of DHA, which the OIG points out is only used to “hire any candidate who is qualified for the position,” regardless of qualifications.

“TTS incorrectly used DHA by routinely using competitive ranking processes to seek out highly qualified candidates,” the report stated, adding that the approach “raises concerns about whether TTS had a hiring emergency and TTS attempted to circumvent veterans’ preference.” 

In doing so, TTS hired fewer veterans compared with the rest of GSA, the OIG determined. 

The watchdog further found TTS hiring managers “preselected and backfilled candidates for merit promotions,” bypassing the competitive hiring process that assesses an applicant’s qualifications and performance. 

Through an analysis of emails and hiring documentation, the OIG determined TTS put qualified candidates at a disadvantage as a result. This was furthered by the application limits TTS put on their postings, which sometimes resulted in job announcements only being active for one day, the watchdog said. 

The OIG recommended the FAS commissioner evaluate TTS’s use of DHA, ensure its hiring procedures comply with governmentwide and GSA-specific hiring requirements and strengthen controls to guarantee an “open and fair competition” among applicants. 

The report shared additional concerns about TTS’s use of recruitment incentives, which are typically used to entice candidates to take hard-to-fill roles. 

Despite “consistently successful recruitment,” TTS continued to offer recruitment incentives that went beyond GSA-recommended amounts, according to the report. The tech services arm further failed to conduct the mandatory annual evaluation of whether these incentives were still needed the following year. 

This included the distribution of superior qualifications appointments (SQA), a recruitment tool offering prospective employees higher pay rates based on their “superior qualifications or a special agency need.”

In some cases, the OIG said hiring documentation lacked details justifying the SQAs and no examples arose of other, often less costly, recruitment incentives being considered instead. 

The FAS commissioner disagreed with the audit’s methodology and the OIG’s recommendations, the watchdog said. 

“The FAS Commissioner’s disagreement suggests that FAS is not planning to take any action to address these recommendations, leaving FAS at risk of violating hiring requirements in the future,” the report wrote. 

Read the whole story
acdha
4 hours ago
reply
You don’t say
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

Senate votes to kill entire public broadcasting budget in blow to NPR and PBS - Ars Technica

1 Share

CPB expenses in fiscal year 2025 are $545 million, of which 66.9 percent goes to TV programming. Another 22.3 percent goes to radio programming, while the rest is for administration and support.

The CPB distributes over 70 percent of its funding to about 1,500 public radio and TV stations. Those stations pay fees to NPR and PBS, which also get money from sponsorships, donations, and grants.

Emergency alerts system at risk

Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) talked about the funding's impact on emergency alerts in a speech from the Senate floor. Stations "running on backup generators are built to broadcast through disasters" and can send alerts even when people don't have Internet access, she said. Cantwell said that PBS WARN works "when everything else goes dark... ensuring that warnings about tornadoes, fires, floods and evacuations reach your cell phone in seconds."

As the Corporation for Public Broadcasting explains, "PBS WARN enables all public television stations to send WEAs [Wireless Emergency Alerts] out over their transmitters to provide a 'hardened, redundant' alternate path for the cellular companies' connection. Between January 1 and December 31, 2024, more than 11,000 WEAs issued by federal, state, and local authorities were transmitted over the PBS WARN system, a 30 percent increase over 2023. Public television stations save lives in their communities, even those who might never turn on a television."

NPR manages the Public Radio Satellite System, which "receives a national Emergency Alert System feed directly from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to send Presidential emergency alerts to local public radio stations," the CPB said.

NPR CEO Katherine Maher issued a statement, pointing to an NPR-commissioned survey which found that over 75 percent of Republicans and Democrats rely on public radio emergency alerts and news for public safety. "We call on the House of Representatives to reject this elimination of public media funding, which directly harms their communities and constituents, and could very well place lives at risk," Maher said.

Read the whole story
acdha
6 hours ago
reply
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

‘Landmark’ study: three-person IVF leads to eight healthy children

1 Share

Nature, Published online: 16 July 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-02276-5

Long-awaited results suggest that mitochondrial donation can prevent babies from inheriting diseases caused by mutant mitochondria.
Read the whole story
acdha
6 hours ago
reply
Washington, DC
Share this story
Delete

Looking back on the golden age of skyjacking

1 Comment

Something triggered a memory for me of how when I was a child in the late 60s and early 70s there were a lot of popular culture jokes in the US about skyjackings, almost all of which — the jokes that is — revolved around the skyjacker demanding the plane be taken to Cuba.

This made me wonder how many such incidents there were. I had a vague sense that airport security was minimal at the time, although I didn’t actually fly on a plane between a couple of flights to Mexico as a toddler in the early 1960s that I don’t remember, and the mid-1970s.

The wonders of the internet being what they are, I hunted around a bit and discovered the following:

Skyjackings, both in the US and internationally, were very rare prior to the 1960s. Then over the course of the 1960s they started to become a regular thing in the US primarily. This clearly seems to have been some sort of copycat/social contagion phenomenon, as incidents and coverage of them begat more incidents, to the point where between 1968 and 1972 there was a skyjacking of a commercial flight in the US an average of once every 13 days!

There were 137 such incidents over those five years. 90 involved demands to take the plane to Cuba, 21 to other destinations, and 26 were extortion attempts of some sort. I haven’t found any information of how many of these attempts were successful — I’m pretty sure that nothing like 90 flights ended up in Cuba — and I gather that, at the time, this was considered more of a kind of relatively petty annoyance, more like losing your luggage, than the sort of terrorist incident that skyjackings would later become, both in reality and certainly in the popular imagination.

One reason there were so many was that my sense that airport security was minimal was if anything an overstatement: it was more like completely non-existent. There wasn’t even an FAA rule against carrying a concealed weapon on a flight until 1961, cockpit doors mostly didn’t exist and certainly weren’t locked prior to the mid-1960s, and — check this out — carry-on luggage received no screening of any kind whatsoever prior to an emergency executive order from Richard Nixon in December of 1972! In those days, you could just saunter onto a commercial jet with a Dirty Harry style 45 magnum in your carryon luggage and no one would be the wiser, just as had been the case in biblical times.

Speaking of which, TSA officials confiscated 6,678 firearms at airport security checkpoints last year, which is something like 19 per day. 94% were loaded. All of which is to say that America is land of contrasts and the election of Donald Trump will remain an eternal mystery.

Returning to our main topic, what most strikes me about all this was how the concept of skyjacking, which later became associated with various famous international terrorist incidents, was in the US in the late 1960s and early 1970s regarded more like some sort of public nuisance, rather than a national emergency, despite, or possibly because of, its remarkable frequency.

In any event by the late 1970s new airport security measures produced a very sharp decline in these incidents, and by the 1990s skyjackings in the US were pretty much a distant memory. (The famous skyjacking terrorist incidents of the 1980s and 1990s were all overseas rather than in in the US). The 9/11 hijackers took advantage of a certain laxness around security measures that had developed in the intervening years, and of course since then airport and on-plane security has become much more stringent, although the fact that at least 19 Americans per day throw a loaded gun into their carry on bags — I assume some guns get through TSA, despite advanced detectors etc. — is a testament to the bizarre culture in which we live.

Speaking of which:

. . . it has been pointed out that this post failed to mention D.B. Cooper, let alone speculate on his fate, banknote serial numbers etc. Here’s a recent movie about that incident.

The post Looking back on the golden age of skyjacking appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

Read the whole story
fxer
7 hours ago
reply
> In those days, you could just saunter onto a commercial jet with a Dirty Harry style 45 magnum in your carryon luggage and no one would be the wiser, just as had been the case in biblical times.

Praise Be
Bend, Oregon
agwego
3 hours ago
Christ in the 90's they were flying with cockpit door wide open, LOL
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories