IRS Criminal Investigation
Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation is the United States federal law enforcement agency responsible for investigating potential criminal violations of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code and related financial crimes, such as money laundering, currency transaction violations, tax-related identity theft fraud and terrorist financing that adversely affect tax administration. While other federal agencies also have investigative jurisdiction for money laundering and some Bank Secrecy Act violations, IRS-CI is the only federal agency that can investigate potential criminal violations of the Internal Revenue Code, in a manner intended to foster confidence in the tax system and deter violations of tax law. Criminal Investigation is a division of the Internal Revenue Service, which in turn is a bureau within the United States Department of the Treasury.
According to information on the IRS web site, the conviction rate for federal tax prosecutions has never fallen below 90 percent. The IRS asserts that their conviction rate is among the highest and that it is a record that is unmatched in federal law enforcement. According to the 2019 annual report, 1500 investigations were initiated by IRS-CI, with 942 prosecutions recommended and 848 sentenced.
IRS-CI is a founding member of the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement, a global joint operational group formed in mid-2018 to combat transnational tax crime. IRS-CI is also a member agency of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, a federal drug enforcement program concerned with the disruption of major drug trafficking operations and related crimes, such as money laundering, tax and weapon violations and violent crime.
History
On July 1, 1919, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Daniel C. Roper created the Intelligence Unit to investigate widespread allegations of tax fraud.To establish the Intelligence Unit, six United States Post Office Inspectors were transferred to the Bureau of Internal Revenue to become the first special agents of the organization that would one day become Criminal Investigation.
Among the first six, Elmer Lincoln Irey was designated as the Chief of the new unit. Hugh McQuillan, Arthur A. Nichols, Frank Frayser, Everett Partridge and Herbert E. Lucas were the other five that made up the new unit.
On October 6, 1919, Irey brought in William H. Woolf from the Office of the Chief Postal Inspector in Washington as his Assistant Chief. They formed the nucleus that became the Intelligence Unit.
The Intelligence Unit quickly became renowned for the financial investigative skill of its special agents. It attained national prominence in the 1930s for the conviction of public enemy number one, Al Capone, for income tax evasion, and its role in solving the Lindbergh kidnapping.
From these promising beginnings the Intelligence Unit expanded over the intervening decades, investigating tax evasion by ordinary citizens, prominent businesspersons, government officials, and notorious criminals.
Unofficially, the agents in the Intelligence Unit were known as "T-Men" due to their affiliation with the United States Department of the Treasury.
In July 1978, the Intelligence Unit changed its name to Criminal Investigation.
Over the years CI's statutory jurisdiction expanded to include money laundering and currency violations in addition to its traditional role in investigating tax violations.
However, Criminal Investigation's core mission remains unchanged. It continues to fulfill the important role of helping to ensure the integrity and fairness of the United States tax system.
In July 2019, IRS-CI celebrated their 100th anniversary. The agency celebrated the occasion with planned events in distinct IRS-CI Field Offices nationwide including Washington D.C., San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Chicago.
Organization
Agency executive
IRS-CI is headed by the Chief, Criminal Investigation appointed by the IRS Commissioner.The Chief reports to the Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement and is responsible for the full range of planning, managing, directing, and executing the worldwide activities of CI.
The current Chief is Guy Ficco, who oversees a worldwide staff of approximately 3,300 CI employees, including approximately 2,200 special agents who investigate and assist in the prosecution of criminal tax, money laundering, public corruption, cyber, ID theft, narcotics, terrorist-financing and Bank Secrecy Act related crime cases.
Field offices
IRS-CI operates 21 field offices in the United States located in Atlanta, Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Newark, New York, Oakland, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Seattle, St. Louis, Tampa and Washington D.C..Many of these offices are further subdivided into smaller resident agencies which have jurisdiction over a specific area. These resident agencies are considered to be part of the primary field offices.
The IRS-CI headquarters, located in Washington, D.C., controls the flow of the agents and support staff that work out of the field offices across the country. Each field office is overseen by a Special Agent in Charge and assisted by one Assistant Special Agent in Charge.
In addition to the field offices in the United States, IRS-CI, through its Office of International Operations, has special agent attachés stationed in 11 foreign countries:
Organizational structure
- Office of the Chief
- *Chief
- *Deputy Chief
- *Chief of Staff
- *Communications & Education
- *Equity, Diversity & Inclusion
- *Review & Program Evaluation
- **Field Operations
- ***Midstates Area Field Offices
- ***Northern Area Field Offices
- ***Southern Area Field Offices
- ***Western Area Field Offices
- **International Operations
- ***Field Operations East
- ***Field Operations West
- ***Narcotics, Counterterrorism, & Transnational Organized Crime
- **Operations, Policy and Support
- ***National Forensic Laboratory
- ***Financial Crimes
- ***Special Investigative Techniques
- ***Warrants & Forfeiture
- ***Treasury Liaison
- ***FinCEN Liaison
- ***TEOAF Liaison
- **Strategy
- ***Finance
- ***Human Resources
- ***National CI Training Academy
- ***Applied Analytics
- **Refund & Cyber Crimes
- ***Systems & Analysis
- ***Operations, Scheme Development, and Support
- ***Cyber Crimes
- **Technology Operations & Investigative Services
- ***Business Systems Development
- ***Cybersecurity
- ***Electronic Crimes
- ***Program Management, Acquisition, & Contracts
- ***Technical Operations Center
- ***User Support
Rank structure
- Field Agents
- * New Agent Trainee
- * Special Agent
- * Supervisory Special Agent
- * Assistant Special Agent-in-Charge
- * Special Agent-in-Charge
- Management
- * Directors
- ** Field Operations
- ** International Operations
- ** Operations, Policy and Support
- ** Refund and Cyber Crimes
- ** Strategy
- ** Technology Operations and Investigative Services
- * Deputy Chief of Staff
- * Chief of Staff
- * Deputy Chief
- * Chief
Special agents
New special agents attend approximately six months of formal training followed by 1-4 years of on-the-job training including:
| Name | Abbreviation | Stage |
| Pre-Basic Orientation Training Program | PB | Phase 1 |
| Criminal Investigator Training Program | CITP | Phase 2 |
| Special Agent Investigative Techniques | SAIT | Phase 3 |
| On-the-Job Training | OJT | Phase 4 |
Special agents must satisfactorily complete the SAIT to retain employment with IRS-CI.
Authority
IRS-CI Special Agents are trained to execute arrest and search warrants and conduct authorized undercover operations, including technical surveillance.Consistent with the safe conduct of such operations, special agents are trained in building-entry and non-lethal defensive tactics training, in harmony with current Federal law enforcement use-of-force training.
Special agents also serve as dignitary protection staff and in air marshal roles.
Investigation categories
The Criminal Investigation strategic plan is composed of four interdependent programs:- Legal Source Tax Crimes
- Illegal Source Financial Crimes
- Narcotics Related Financial Crimes
- Counterterrorism Financing
Criminal Investigation must investigate and assist in the prosecution of those significant financial investigations that will generate the maximum deterrent effect, enhance voluntary compliance, and promote public confidence in the tax system.
Legal source tax crimes
Investigating Legal Source Tax Crimes is IRS-CI's primary resource commitment.Legal Source Tax investigations involve taxpayers in legal industries and occupations who earned income legally but chose to evade taxes by violating tax laws, such as not reporting stock buy backs.
Illegal source financial crimes
The Illegal Source Financial Crimes Program attempts to detect all tax and tax-related violations, as well as money laundering and currency violations.This program recognizes that money gained through illegal sources is part of the "untaxed underground economy" that threatens the voluntary tax compliance system and undermines public confidence in the tax system.