 From Soldiers Radio and Television, this is the Army Now. No one likes to receive a letter from the IRS, unless of course it's a check. But if your email inbox is filling up from notes from the IRS, you should be suspicious. You'll get an email that looks official, that claims to come from the IRS, and it's asking for your personal information. And oftentimes the hook is, you're doing additional refund. Sometimes these scams threaten to audit you. To an unsuspecting taxpayer, they might think, okay, I need to respond to this, and get the IRS off my back. And so before you even think about responding to an email that claims to be from the IRS, I just want to make absolutely clear that the IRS does not initiate contact with taxpayers over email asking for their personal information. If you receive a suspicious email from the IRS, delete it, or you can forward it to phishingatirs.gov. And that's your Army Now.