KEY POINTS
  • Conservation easements allow wealthy Americans to claim deductions for preserving land.
  • Some may be using the deductions to escape tax obligations.
  • Now, a Congressional proposal has been reintroduced to help the government clamp down on these abuses.
An IRS office building in the East Harlem neighborhood of New York.

Last December, two Atlanta tax professionals pled guilty to a scheme that defrauded the IRS of more than $250 million in taxes.

The scam claimed more than $1.2 billion in fraudulent charitable deductions through so-called syndicated conservation easements, a strategy most taxpayers probably have never heard of.