IRS estimates there's over $1 billion in unclaimed 2020 tax year refunds, warns of approaching deadline



The Internal Revenue Service noted in a March 25 press release that due to scads of people failing to file their 2020 taxes, an estimated more than $1 billion in refunds have gone unclaimed for that tax year.

But the agency warned that that clock is ticking: People need to act before the approaching deadline if they want the opportunity to claim the cash.

"Under the law, taxpayers usually have three years to file and claim their tax refunds. If they don’t file within three years, the money becomes the property of the U.S. Treasury," the IRS noted. "But for 2020 tax returns, people have a little more time than usual to file to claim their refunds. Typically, the normal filing deadline to claim old refunds falls around the April tax deadline, which is April 15 this year for 2023 tax returns. But the three-year window for 2020 unfiled returns was postponed to May 17, 2024, due to the COVID-19 pandemic emergency."

As Americans toil to file their 2023 taxes before the deadline next month, the ever-expanding U.S. national debt is more than $34 trillion.

"There's money remaining on the table for hundreds of thousands of people who haven’t filed 2020 tax returns," IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel said, according to an IRS press release. "We want taxpayers to claim these refunds, but time is running out for people who may have overlooked or forgotten about these refunds. There's a May 17 deadline to file these returns so taxpayers should start soon to make sure they don't miss out."

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Democratic prosecutor sues to prevent Donald Trump from receiving $1M tax return owed to him



A Chicago prosecutor has filed a lawsuit to prevent former President Donald Trump from receiving a $1 million tax return that the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board recently ruled is rightly owed to Trump.

What are the details?

The Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board ruled in a 5-0 vote in June that Trump is owed a $1.03 million tax refund on the 2011 tax fill for hotel and retail space inside the Trump International Hotel & Tower, which is located in downtown Chicago.

The board determined the "Cook County Board of Review overestimated the value of the building's hotel rooms and retail space," according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

In response, Cook County State Attorney Kimberly Foxx, a Democrat, filed a lawsuit with the Illinois Appellate Court on July 9 to prevent Trump from receiving the money that state regulators said he is rightly owed.

Foxx reportedly wants to block the refund because the money used to pay Trump "would come out of property taxes due to the city of Chicago and eight other government agencies, including Chicago Public Schools, which stands to lose the biggest chunk of money, about $540,000," the Sun-Times reported.

What is the background?

The Associated Press reported the development is but another twist in a complicated legal battle that began more than a decade ago, but has resulted in more than $14 million in tax breaks for Trump.

More from the AP:

The dispute over the tax bills on the high-rise building has it's own long history. Originally, the state agency rejected Trump's argument that the vacant stores had no value because he could not find any tenants to lease them. A hearing officer for the state agency rejected Trump's argument that the vacant stores at the building had no value because he couldn't lease them. But a staff member later wrote a report that Trump was entitled to the refund.

The agency delayed acting on the case until Trump was out of office and in June voted to reduce the assessment on the building's commercial property.

The Trump International Hotel & Tower is the second-tallest high-rise in the Windy City, the 7th tallest in the U.S., and the 32nd tallest in the world.