Today the IRS released a statement addressing a situation involving improper use of confidential information by an IRS employee. One rogue employee took home an unencrypted flash drive containing “employee-related information” that dates back to 2007. Typically this type of problem would be discovered by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) and released in one of their famous audit reports. However, this particular incident was identified by the IRS which preemptively released its statement via their own “newsroom” today.
One news source cited the commissioner as saying that the incident did not involve any taxpayer information. This would have been a humorous gaff, had he actually said this. Humorous because even if the information that was put at risk belonged to former or present IRS employees, wouldn’t it also be taxpayer information? The last time I checked, IRS employees have to pay taxes too. But I think this was a bad job of paraphrasing. Put back into context, the statement reads a little differently. According to the prepared statement, the information “included IRS employee-related information and not general taxpayer information or records.” Even though the difference in wording is very slight, it makes quite a difference in meaning.
According to the statement, this was an “isolated instance,” and inappropriate use of this information “could not occur in today’s environment.” Mmm-Hmmm…