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BILL โ€ข US HOUSE

HR 3469

Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act

119th Congress
Introduced by Gabe Amo, Becca Balint, Joyce Beatty and 17 other co-sponsors

This bill reinstates the federal tax deduction for personal casualty losses due to crimes, scams, or disasters, applying retroactively to tax years after December 31, 2017.

Introduced in House
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Bill Summary ยท HR 3469

Bill Summary: Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act (H.R. 3469)

Overview

The Tax Relief for Victims of Crimes, Scams, and Disasters Act is a legislative proposal designed to restore tax relief for individuals who have suffered significant personal financial losses. The bill focuses specifically on reinstating the ability for taxpayers to deduct personal casualty losses on their federal income tax returns, effectively reversing a restriction implemented in recent years.

Main Purpose and Intent

The primary intent of this bill is to provide financial relief to taxpayers who have fallen victim to crimes, scams, or natural disasters. By amending the Internal Revenue Code, the bill seeks to allow taxpayers to deduct losses resulting from these events, thereby reducing their overall taxable income and lowering their tax liability.

Key Provisions

1. Reinstatement of the Personal Casualty Loss Deduction

The bill amends Section 165(h) of the Internal Revenue Code to strike paragraph (5).
* What this means: This action removes the previous restriction that limited personal casualty loss deductions.
* Retroactive Application: This change is designed to be retroactive, applying to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017.

2. Extension for Filing Claims (Refunds and Credits)

Recognizing that many taxpayers may have already filed returns without this deduction due to the previous law, the bill provides a mechanism for recovery:
* Extended Deadline: For taxpayers who filed returns for years ending before January 1, 2025, the time limit (statute of limitations) to file a claim for a credit or refund is extended.
* New Filing Window: Taxpayers can now file for these refunds up until the deadline for the tax year in which this Act is enacted.
* Specific Scope: This extension applies only to overpayments resulting from the personal casualty loss deduction (specifically those described in section 165(c)(3) of the Code).

Who is Affected?

  • Victims of Casualties: Individuals who experienced losses due to disasters, theft, or other "casualty" events as defined by the IRS.
  • Victims of Fraud/Crime: Those who suffered financial losses due to scams or criminal activity.
  • Past Tax Filers: Individuals who filed tax returns between 2018 and 2024 and were unable to claim a casualty loss deduction because it was suspended.

Summary Table

Feature Detail
Primary Action Reinstates personal casualty loss deductions
Effective Date Retroactive to taxable years after Dec 31, 2017
Claim Extension Allows retroactive refund claims until the current tax year's filing date
Jurisdiction United States Federal Tax Law (Internal Revenue Code)

Current Status

As of May 15, 2025, the bill has been introduced in the House and referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means for review.

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