kdated a penalty lead sheet and that IRS Counsel misrepresented the timing to the Court, resulting in sanctions under section 6673(a)(2).
For practitioners handling exams and Tax Court cases, especially syndicated conservation easement (SCE) matters, this report is essentially a roadmap for both IRS vulnerabilities and best practices you should be ready to leverage.
The
Focus: Section 6751(b) in SCE Cases
Section 6751(b) was enacted in 1998
as a safeguard to ensure supervisory oversight of many civil penalties and to
prevent penalties from being used as a “bargaining chip” in audits. It
generally requires written approval of the initial penalty determination by the
immediate supervisor of the IRS employee proposing the penalty, with exceptions
for certain automated and basic failure‑to‑file or pay penalties.
Following the LakePoint decision, the IRS and Chief Counsel launched a special review in August 2023 of 1,268 SCE cases—829 docketed and 439 nondocketed—to assess compliance with section 6751(b). SCE transactions were chosen because the IRS has labeled them abusive and has examined or litigated more than 1,200 of them, making them a natural stress test for penalty procedures.
What
TIGTA Found: Backdating, Missing Approvals, and Documentation Gaps
TIGTA’s findings will sound familiar
to anyone who has litigated 6751(b) issues, but now they are documented in an
official oversight report.
·
In the
829 docketed cases, the IRS identified 13 cases that did not comply with
section 6751(b) due to lack of valid supervisory approval, and TIGTA agreed
with those determinations.
o In 7 of the 13 cases, supervisors
backdated penalty approvals; the IRS conceded more than $68 million in
penalties as a result.
o In the remaining 6 cases, alternative
penalties were added after the initial supervisory approval, and the IRS
conceded those unapproved alternatives.
·
In the
439 nondocketed cases, the IRS initially reported full compliance, but TIGTA
found:
o 6 cases where neither TIGTA nor the
IRS could verify timely supervisory approval because key documents, such as
explanatory letters to taxpayers, were missing from the case file.
o Other documentation problems,
including multiple versions of penalty lead sheets with identical digital
signatures, penalties listed in taxpayer correspondence without a corresponding
approved lead sheet, and summary reports reflecting penalties that lacked
documented supervisory approval.
TIGTA characterizes these problems as
reflecting weak supervisory oversight and systemic documentation and internal
control deficiencies in the penalty approval process. The practical risk is
clear: if the IRS cannot prove timely approval, penalties may be conceded or
struck, and taxpayers’ confidence in the fairness of the system can erode.
TIGTA also flagged five potential unauthorized disclosure issues under section 6103, including instances where correspondence included another taxpayer’s name or TIN. One was self‑reported, and the others were referred to IRS management.
Digital
Signatures: A Double‑Edged Sword for IRS (and a Tool for You)
One of the more interesting parts of
TIGTA’s report is the discussion of digital signatures and document properties.
Chief Counsel’s internal review
discovered cases where penalty lead sheets had been modified after being
digitally signed, as shown by electronic document properties, without a new
digital signature being applied. That analysis helped drive the IRS’s decision
to concede penalties in 6 of the 13 noncompliant docketed cases.
TIGTA emphasizes that:
·
IRS
policy does not currently require secure digital signatures that lock the
document against changes or force re‑signing after edits.
·
IRS
Counsel is not required by the Chief Counsel Directives Manual (CCDM) to
conduct electronic document analysis in every docketed case, and current
guidance on that is informal.
Yet TIGTA explicitly notes that digital signatures, combined with review of electronic document properties, provide some of the best available evidence of authentic, timely supervisory approvals in litigation. For practitioners, that is both a warning and an opportunity: the existence of digital signatures and metadata cuts both ways, and TIGTA is encouraging the IRS to use them more systematically.
Why Did Backdating Happen? TIGTA’s Diagnosis
TIGTA ties the backdating and
documentation problems to two main causes:
·
Employees
failed to follow existing policies, procedures, and appropriate practices.
·
The IRS
lacked clear, consistent guidance on:
o When penalties must be approved,
o How to document penalty changes, and
o How to hold employees accountable,
including an explicit prohibition on backdating.
The LB&I Division conducted
disciplinary reviews for several employees in the 13 problem docketed cases,
with outcomes ranging from non‑disciplinary counseling letters to written
reprimands. TIGTA notes that, given the facts, other categories of misconduct
in the IRS Penalty Guide could have supported more serious discipline,
including suspensions or removal.
On timing, the report walks through
the current legal landscape. Courts have split on when supervisory approval is
required, some allowing approval up to assessment and others requiring earlier
approval in the examination process. Treasury issued regulations in 2023 that,
broadly speaking, permit supervisory approval as late as the notice of
deficiency for pre‑assessment penalties and any time up to assessment for
post‑assessment penalties. Internal procedures were updated to align with those
regulations, including changes to IRM 20.1.1.2.3 in November 2025.
At the same time, TIGTA notes a December 2025 bill—the Fair and Accountable IRS Reviews Act—proposing to amend section 6751(b)(1) to require supervisory approval before any written communication proposing the penalty is provided to the taxpayer, consistent with the National Taxpayer Advocate’s position.
TIGTA’s
Five Recommenations – and IRS’s Commitments
TIGTA made five recommendations, and
IRS management agreed with all of them.
1. Promote
digital approvals
TIGTA recommends that the IRS promote the use of digital approvals for penalty
approval documents to enhance record integrity, accountability, and evidentiary
reliability. The IRS agreed and committed to continue promoting digital
signatures and other secure electronic methods, tying this to broader
communications on penalty procedures.
2. Standardize
penalty procedures and documentation
TIGTA urges the Chief Tax Compliance Officer to work with SB/SE and LB&I to
review and revise penalty procedures to ensure consistency in obtaining and
documenting supervisory approvals and verifying section 6751(b) compliance. The
IRS responded that procedures have already been updated to align with section
6751(b) and Treas. Reg. § 301.6751(b)-1, including revisions to IRM 20.1.1.2.3
(November 25, 2025), and that enhanced review procedures are in place.
3. Formal
6751(b) checks in all docketed cases
TIGTA recommends adding explicit CCDM procedures requiring Counsel attorneys to
verify section 6751(b) compliance in all docketed cases, which may include
reviewing electronic document properties and corroborating materials such as
activity records and emails. Chief Counsel agreed to update the CCDM
accordingly.
4. Explicitly
prohibit backdating and clarify update procedures
TIGTA recommends that SB/SE and LB&I Commissioners:
o Communicate clearly that backdating
penalty approvals is not appropriate.
o Require penalty approval documents to
be dated contemporaneously.
o Remind employees when supervisory
approval is required.
o Provide guidance on how to update
signed documents when changes are needed.
5. The IRS agreed, stating it will issue
a memo advising that penalty approval documents must be contemporaneously
dated, that backdating is not appropriate, clarifying timing requirements, and
explaining how to properly update signed documents, with an emphasis on
securing electronic approval as a best practice.
6. Operational
reviews after sanctions
Finally, TIGTA points out that the IRS did not conduct an operational review
after LakePoint, even though the court imposed sanctions for inaccurate
statements and a false declaration, while a contemporaneous SCE case (Everest
Granite) did trigger an operational review when sanctions were threatened.
TIGTA recommends updating the CCDM to require a review whenever a court imposes
sanctions against Chief Counsel. Chief Counsel agreed to make that change.
Practical
Takeaways for Taxpayers and Practitioners
The TIGTA report has immediate
practical implications, particularly in SCE and other penalty‑heavy cases:
·
6751(b) remains a potent defense. TIGTA confirms that even in a
focused review the IRS found multiple noncompliant cases and conceded tens of
millions of dollars in penalties, largely because of backdating and poor
documentation. Practitioners should continue to scrutinize penalty approval
timing and documentation in every penalty case.
·
Ask for digital versions and
metadata. TIGTA’s emphasis on digital
signatures and document properties should encourage defense counsel to seek
native electronic versions of penalty approval documents in discovery or
informal exchanges, not just PDFs, and to consider their own metadata reviews.
·
Expect evolving IRS procedures. With IRM and CCDM updates underway
and a potential legislative change on the horizon, the “when” and “how” of
supervisory approval will likely become more formalized and perhaps earlier in
the exam timeline. Staying current with IRM 20.1 and related CCDM provisions
will be essential.
·
Document your own record. When you receive a proposed
adjustment or penalty, preserve the correspondence, envelopes, and any metadata
you can. Those timestamps may matter if the IRS later produces an approval that
appears to post‑date the communication.
·
SCE cases are the testing ground—but
not the end. Although the review focused
on SCE transactions, TIGTA’s recommendations and the IRS’s responses are not
limited to that area. Expect stricter documentation and more formal 6751(b)
checks across all operating divisions.
If you’re representing clients facing significant penalties, this report provides both an advocacy roadmap and a preview of how IRS processes may tighten in the coming years.
Have A Tax Penalty Problem?
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)
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