Received a Notice of Deficiency for an amount I do not agree with. (It was for an amount I paid, but IRS lost my amended return and refunded because they didn't know what I was paying). Now 1-1/2 years later, a letter shows up asking for the same amended return, but due to my receiving letter 3 weeks late and my response taking over 2 months to get logged into IRS database, system automatically kicked out the Notice.
Anyway, spoke to two different IRS agents and both felt interest and penalties for certain would be eliminated, and possibly a portion of the amount due since it was their screw-up. I was instructed not to sign the Notice (because if I sign it means I agree), but write a letter so a response is on file, and in the next 30-60 days my file will be assigned to a specific agent who will be able to resolve this.
I am filing pro se in the next 10 days, so my question is, do I mark this as 'disputed' on Schedule D, even though technically it is not a formal dispute since I cannot discuss it with IRS? Secondly, I was advised not to sign the Notice, but will listing it on Schedule D be the same thing as admitting I agree?
Anyway, spoke to two different IRS agents and both felt interest and penalties for certain would be eliminated, and possibly a portion of the amount due since it was their screw-up. I was instructed not to sign the Notice (because if I sign it means I agree), but write a letter so a response is on file, and in the next 30-60 days my file will be assigned to a specific agent who will be able to resolve this.
I am filing pro se in the next 10 days, so my question is, do I mark this as 'disputed' on Schedule D, even though technically it is not a formal dispute since I cannot discuss it with IRS? Secondly, I was advised not to sign the Notice, but will listing it on Schedule D be the same thing as admitting I agree?
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