Reviewed on: April 02,2026
Prison Rumors & Jail Scams

Is My Incarcerated Nephew Running a Tax Fraud Scheme?

Brothers; I'm concerned about something similar I fear. My nephew is asking that someone purchase visa or money cards so that funds may be received from the IRS, Also he is inquiring about if he could receive blank checks and account numbers so funds could be placed on cards from refunds. Im so concerned about what this truly may be. Is there any information that could be provided to me? Research-wise I do not know where to even start. Would you guys have any information about such situations? Please let me know and thank you.

What you are describing is a well-documented federal crime, and your instincts to be concerned are correct.
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer February 23,2015 · Prison Rumors & Jail Scams
1

What you are describing is a well-documented federal crime, and your instincts to be concerned are correct.

Tax fraud schemes run from inside prison have received significant national attention and federal prosecution. The pattern is consistent: an incarcerated person collects Social Security numbers from fellow inmates or outside contacts, files false tax returns claiming refunds those people never earned, and routes the money through prepaid cards, debit cards, or bank accounts controlled by outside accomplices. The request for blank checks, account numbers, and prepaid cards is exactly how the money gets moved out of the system.

Your nephew is asking you to be one of those outside accomplices. Whether he has framed it that way or not, that is the role he is recruiting you for. Outside co-conspirators in these schemes have been prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced right alongside the inmates running them. Pleading ignorance after the fact is not a reliable defense once your name and account information appear in a federal investigation.

The IRS and the Treasury Inspector General have been actively pursuing prison tax fraud for years. Schemes that collected hundreds of thousands of dollars have resulted in federal conspiracy charges with serious prison time for everyone involved, inside and out.

Do not purchase the cards. Do not provide account numbers. Do not accept any funds directed to you for this purpose.

If you are uncertain about whether you have already been drawn into something, consult an attorney before taking any further steps. And if you believe a scheme is actively in progress, the IRS fraud hotline and the Treasury Inspector General's office both accept tips.

Accepted Answer Date Created: February 23,2015
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About this answer: This response was prepared by InmateAid’s editorial team in consultation with former inmates who have direct experience with the federal correctional system. InmateAid has served families of the incarcerated since 2012. This is general information only — not legal advice. Last reviewed April 2026.