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Tax Preparer Convicted on 11 False Return Counts

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Summary

IRS Criminal Investigation announced that a federal jury in the Western District of Texas convicted Natasha Sheree Banks-Brown on 11 counts of aiding or assisting in the filing of false tax returns. Banks-Brown owned and operated "Tasha's Total Tax Service" beginning in 2016 and filed approximately 1,200 fraudulent tax returns between 2017 and 2021, generating over $8 million in false refunds using fabricated deductions and credits. Banks-Brown controlled deposit destinations for returns through her software and provided clients only partial refunds while retaining the remainder.

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What changed

A federal jury convicted tax preparer Natasha Sheree Banks-Brown on 11 counts of aiding or assisting in the filing of false tax returns under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). Evidence showed she operated "Tasha's Total Tax Service" from 2016 through 2021, filing approximately 1,200 returns containing fraudulent deductions and credits that generated over $8 million in inflated refunds, routing deposits to accounts she controlled and providing clients only partial disbursements.\n\nTax preparation professionals face heightened enforcement risk following this conviction, as IRS-CI explicitly stated it deploys undercover special agents to document return preparer conduct. Tax preparers and their clients should be aware of the specific red flags highlighted in this case: preparers who quote no fixed price and take fees from refunds, software that routes deposits to preparer-controlled accounts, and failure to provide clients copies of filed returns. The case signals ongoing IRS-CI focus on return preparer fraud as a priority enforcement area, with sentencing scheduled for July 13, 2026.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

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Date: April 10, 2026

Contact: newsroom@ci.irs.gov

San Antonio – A federal jury convicted a San Antonio woman today on 11 counts of aiding or assisting in the filing of a false tax return, announced U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas, Justin R. Simmons.

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Natasha Sheree Banks-Brown owned and operated a tax preparation business named “Tasha’s Total Tax Service,” beginning in 2016. In December 2020, IRS Criminal Investigations began investigating an increasing number of questionable tax returns prepared by Banks-Brown.

The investigation revealed that Banks-Brown filed individual tax returns on behalf of her clients which included false and fraudulent deductions and credits which significantly increased their tax refunds.   Banks-Brown never quoted a specific price for her services and said that she would take her fee out of the return.  As part of her fraudulent scheme, she used tax preparation software that allowed her to designate returns to be deposited into a bank account she controlled. The client would then receive a portion of the return via a transfer from Banks-Brown’s bank account to the client’s account. Multiple clients testified that they never received a copy of the tax return themselves or reviewed the returns with Banks-Brown, and that they were unaware of her actions. Evidence introduced at trial indicated that Banks-Brown filed close to 1,200 tax returns between 2017 and 2021 that resulted in over $8 million dollars of refunds.

Banks-Brown was indicted on April 3, 2024, and arrested April 16, 2024. A jury was selected on April 6, 2026, and a four-day trial, presided over by U.S. District Judge David Ezra, began on April 7. A sentencing hearing is currently scheduled for July 13.

“Everyone rightly wants to get the best deal on their tax preparation and the largest refund possible, but some things are just too good to be true,” said U.S. Attorney Simmons. “The public should be aware that tax preparers may have the incentive to defraud the IRS for their own personal benefit and to the detriment of their clients.  This defendant abused the trust of her clients to make more than a million dollars for herself and cost the government several times that amount. This tax season, and every tax season, taxpayers should make sure to properly vet their tax preparers and keep an eye out for any suspicious behavior both to protect themselves and the country as a whole from these types of fraudsters.”

“We use tried and true investigative techniques, including undercover special agents, to document what a return preparer does when they think the government isn’t looking,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Rodrick Benton of IRS Criminal Investigation’s Houston Field Office. “In this case, the evidence was very clear that the tax fraud was committed. As tax season comes to a close, be careful who you let file your tax returns.”

IRS-CI investigated the case.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Justin Chung and Ryan Groomer are prosecuting the case.

IRS-CI is the law enforcement arm of the IRS, responsible for conducting financial crime investigations, including tax fraud, narcotics trafficking, money laundering, public corruption, healthcare fraud, identity theft and more. It is the only federal law enforcement agency with investigative jurisdiction over violations of the Internal Revenue Code. IRS-CI has 18 field offices located across the U.S. and maintains an international presence through attaché posts abroad.

Named provisions

26 U.S.C. § 7206(2)

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
IRS-CI
Filed
April 10th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
United States v. Banks-Brown, W.D. Tex.

Who this affects

Applies to
Tax professionals Consumers Public companies
Industry sector
5411 Legal Services
Activity scope
Tax fraud investigation Criminal conviction
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Taxation
Operational domain
Legal
Compliance frameworks
SOX
Topics
Criminal Justice Financial Services

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