Archive for March, 2017

How to get your taxes done, or do them yourself, for free – San Francisco Chronicle

How about getting them done for free or, for do-it-yourselfers, finding free tax-preparation software. There are many freebies around, but relatively few people take advantage of them, generally because its easier to pay someone to do it. If your taxes are complex, thats money well spent. But if they are fairly simple, here are some free options.

IRS Free File: If your adjusted gross income is $64,000 or less, you can get free software to prepare and electronically file your federal return from at least one software company, but depending on your age and income, it might be one youve never heard of. To get these free offers, start at http://www.irs.gov/freefile and choose an offer from one of the 12 tax-software companies participating in the Free File Alliance.

The alliance agreed to provide free software to low- and moderate-income people in exchange for a pledge from the IRS not to enter the tax preparation software and e-filing services marketplace.

Stanford Law School Professor Joseph Bankman says the IRS could pretty easily provide all taxpayers with a free tax return with most of the information filled in. It already gets that information from employers, financial institutions and other sources and lets you know if youve entered it incorrectly. But the industry, led by Mountain Views Intuit, the maker of TurboTax, has lobbied heavily against this, saying that its a conflict of interest to have the government collect taxes and prepare returns.

Under the current agreement with the IRS, each company must make software available to between 10 and 50 percent of U.S. taxpayers. As a group, the alliance must make free software available to taxpayers with an adjusted gross income equal to or less than 70 percent of all U.S. taxpayers. For tax year 2016, thats anyone with income of $64,000 or less.

Youd think people would be clamoring to use Free File, but last year only 2.6 million tax returns, or 1.7 percent of all those filed, came through it. Many taxpayers dont know about Free File, or find it confusing because each company has different eligibility requirements to satisfy the IRS agreement.

TurboTax offers Free File to people making up to $33,000 (or $64,000 for active-duty military or people eligible for the earned income credit). H&R Block goes up $64,000, but only if you are between ages 17 and 50. Some offers exclude certain states and some charge for a state tax return.

If you qualify for Free File, you will be able to prepare and electronically file almost any federal form or schedule, but you wont be able to import information from last years tax return or your W-2 or 1099 forms; you will have to enter this information yourself.

Company websites: If you dont qualify for Free File and your taxes are simple, you can find free offers by going directly to companies websites. TurboTax offers Absolute Zero, which lets anyone file federal Form 1040A or 1040EZ, along with a state return, for free. H&R Block More Zero lets you file Forms 1040EZ, 1040A and 1040 with Schedule A (itemized deductions) and a state return for free.

Free for (almost) all: New to the game this year is Credit Karma, best known for its credit scores and reports. It recently acquired software maker AFJC Corp. and is now offering free online preparation (federal and most states) for about 90 percent of Americans, said Ken Lin, CEO of the San Francisco company.

Its free offer covers all Form 1040 versions and most schedules, but it cant handle a few things such as foreign earned income, multiple-state filings and married couples filing separately in community property states (including California). Unlike some competitors, it does not let you import information from last years tax return or your W-2 or 1099 forms.

The catch: You will get offers for products based on information in your tax return unless you opt out. Credit Karma does not sell or share your tax information with third parties, but we are using it for marketing purposes, Lin said.

In-person help: Several government and nonprofit groups offer free, in-person tax preparation by trained volunteers, primarily for middle- and lower-income people (including undocumented immigrants). In the Bay Area, you can find these centers by dialing 211 or going to http://www.earnitkeepitsaveit.org. This program, sponsored by United Way Bay Area, can refer you to a variety of programs including Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (an IRS program known as VITA), AARP Tax-Aide and Tax Aid, a local group not affiliated with AARP.

VITA is officially for people earning up to $54,000, but exceptions might apply for those who make more, said the United Ways Vanessa Muiz. VITA volunteers can handle most individual tax returns, but cannot serve people who are married filing separately, or have a business with employees, more than $25,000 in expenses or are deducting business use of a home.

The AARP Tax-Aide centers have no income or age limits but are designed primarily for lower- and middle-income people and specialize in tax issues affecting older people. They cant handle certain situations, such as depreciation or rental income, but some centers can do more than others, so its best to call before visiting a center. Some take appointments. Be sure to bring your ID and all tax documents.

Priya Vashist, an international student and teaching assistant at San Francisco State, got her taxes done at a VITA center at the university last week. She said it took four people and about two hours but it all went OK in the end.

Free fillable forms: For do-it-yourselfers who dont qualify for Free File, the IRS offers free fillable forms. These are just electronic versions of paper returns that let you enter information with a keyboard instead of a pen. The programs will do some math computations but not others. Oddly, the system wont calculate your tax, something youd think the IRS would want you to get right. You can e-file these forms.

CalFile: Most California taxpayers can file their state tax return online for free using CalFile, sponsored by the Franchise Tax Board, but last year only about 1 percent did.

With a Basic CalFile account, you dont need a PIN, but must enter everything manually. With a Deluxe Account, you will have to wait for a PIN in the mail, but you will be able to view and import data from last years tax return, California wage and withholding information, estimated payments and other data the state has on you. (If you get a PIN, dont wait too long to activate your account.)

The income limits to use CalFile are high $182,459 for single and $364,923 for joint returns. But some things will exclude you, such as capital gains or losses, business income, rental income, distributions from a retirement account before age 59 and Roth IRA conversions.

Kathleen Pender is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: kpender@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kathpender

Where to get free tax-filing software and preparation

IRS Free File: Start at http://www.irs.gov/freefile and click through to a companys site to get free software for filing your federal (and in some cases state) return.

Free in-person tax prep: Go to http://www.earnitkeepitsaveit.org to find centers staffed by VITA, AARP Tax-Aide and other trained volunteers in the Bay Area. (For Sonoma County, go to http://bit.ly/2lhSgrZ). Or dial 211.

For AARP Tax-Aide centers only: Go to aarp.org/taxaide or call (888) 227-7669.

What to bring to your appointment: https://www.irs.gov/individuals/checklist-for-free-tax-return-preparation

Free fillable IRS tax forms: http://bit.ly/2nkeRW3

To file your California state tax return online for free: https://www.ftb.ca.gov/online/calfile. For help with account registration or PINs, call (800) 353-9032.

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How to get your taxes done, or do them yourself, for free - San Francisco Chronicle

NASA releases key software for free public access – Computer Business Review

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The NASA Software Catalogue offers a portfolio of software products for several technical applications.

US space agency NASA has released its 2017-2018 software catalogue to the public, enabling anyone to access its codes free of charge.

It is the third time NASA has released such a compilation as part of its technology transfer programme.

The catalogue, which is available in both hard copy and online, includes several tools the agency utilises to explore space and widen its understanding of the universe. Several of software packages are being released to the public for the first time.

Structured into 15 categories, the catalogue includes software for data processing/storage, business systems, operations, propulsion, and aeronautics.

It features the code LEWICE, developed to help study the effects of ice on an aircraft in flight and to help develop ice identification systems.

NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate associate administrator Steve Jurczyk said: The software catalogue is our way of supporting the innovation economy by granting access to tools used by todays top aerospace professionals to entrepreneurs, small businesses, academia and industry.

Access to these software codes has the potential to generate tangible benefits that create American jobs, earn revenue and save lives.

Some of the software available includes codes for more advanced drones, and quieter aircraft.

NASA said that while access restrictions apply to some codes, the automation and update of its software release process in the last two years will make sure that it is as quick, easy and straightforward as possible.

NASAs technology transfer programme executive Dan Lockney said software has been a critical component of each of the space agencys mission successes and scientific discoveries, with over 30% of all reported NASA innovations are software.

Were pleased to transfer these tools to other sectors and excited at the prospect of seeing them implemented in new and creative ways, Lockney added.

NASAs technology transfer programme is managed by the Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD).

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NASA releases key software for free public access - Computer Business Review

New York offers free tax filing for low- and middle-income residents – New York Daily News

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Monday, March 13, 2017, 12:16 AM

Low- and middle- income New York residents can get free help to file their taxes.

State officials say they are offering the free tax-filing assistance this month and next at 54 locations around the state.

Taxpayers with adjusted gross household incomes of $64,000 or less qualify to file their tax returns using free online software at the various locations.

Eligible taxpayers who cant attend an event can access free software at the New York state tax departments website.

Tax returns are due by April 18.

LOCATIONS:

Bronx:

* Eastchester Library

1385 East Gun Hill Road, Bronx 10469

Wednesdays

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/29, 4/5, 4/12

* Melrose Library (South Bronx)

910 Morris Avenue, Bronx 10451

Friday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/17, 3/24, 3/31, 4/7, 4/10

Brooklyn:

* Coney Island Public Library

1901 Mermaid Avenue, New York 11224

Tuesday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/21, 3/28, 4/4, 4/11

* Jamaica Bay Library

9727 Seaview Avenue, Brooklyn 11236

Thursday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13

* Red Hook Library

7 Wolcott Street, Brooklyn 11231

Tuesday

11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

3/21, 3/28, 4/4, 4/11

Manhattan:

* Adam Clayton Powell JR SOB

163 West 125th St Rm 8B, New York 10027

Thursday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13

* Neighborhood Trust (Ariva)

1112 St. Nicholas Avenue, New York 10032

Saturday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/18

Queens:

* Queens Library (Cambria Heights)

218-13 Linden Blvd, Cambria Heights 11411

Monday

9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

3/20, 3/27, 4/10

* Queens Library (Central)

89-11 Merrick Blvd, Jamaica 11532

Saturday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/18, 3/25, 4/1, 4/8, 4/15

* Queens Library (Elmhurst)

86-07 Broadway, Elmhurst 11373

Thursday

1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.

3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13

* Queens Library (Far Rockaway)

1637 Central Avenue, Far Rockaway 11691

Saturday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/25, 4/1, 4/8

* Queens Library (Flushing)

41-17 Main Street, Flushing 11355

Tuesday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/14, 3/21, 3/28, 4/4, 4/11

Thursday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/16, 3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13

* Queens Library (Lefferts)

103-34 Lefferts Blvd, Richmond Hill 11419

Wednesday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

4/5, 4/12

* Queens Library (Ridgewood)

20-12 Madison Street, Queens 11385

Tuesday

1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

4/4, 4/11

* Queens Library (Rochdale)

169-09 137th Avenue, Jamaica 11434

Wednesday

11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

3/29, 4/5, 4/12

* Queens Library (Sunnyside)

43-06 Greenpoint Avenue, Long Island City 11104

Thursday

2:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

3/23, 3/30, 4/6, 4/13

* Queens Library (Woodside)

54-22 Skillman Avenue, Woodside 11377

Tuesday

10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

3/28, 4/4, 4/11

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New York offers free tax filing for low- and middle-income residents - New York Daily News

‘Stand your ground’ defense denied for ex-cop in theater killing – Fox 59

A .380 semi-automatic handgun sits on a newspaper(ROBERT SULLIVAN/AFP/Getty Images)

By Meg Wagner

A fight about texting

A retired Florida police captain who shot and killed a man in 2014 inside a movie theater during a dispute over texting cant use the states controversial stand your ground law to defend himself, a judge ruled Friday.

Curtis Reeves, 74, will stand trial for the shooting death of 43-year-old Chad Oulson. He faces second-degree murder charges.

Reeves and his lawyers had argued that he deserved immunity from prosecution under Floridas controversial stand your ground law, which allows anyone who fears death or great bodily harm to use deadly force during a violent confrontation.

Reeves, a former Tampa Police Department captain claimed he was acting in self-defense when he shot Oulson during the previews of a Jan. 13, 2014 showing of the Afghanistan war dramaLone Survivor at Wesley Chapels Cobb Grove 16 cinemas.

Oulson had been texting as he waited for the movie to begin. When Reeves complained and asked him to turn his phone off, Oulson cursed at him, threw popcorn and tried to attack him, Reeves claimed.

He was in a fit of rage, Reeves testified.

But Circuit Judge Susan Barthle ultimately sided with prosecutors, who argued that Reeves should not be allowed to use the stand your ground defense because he provoked the argument. Barthle wrote that there wasnt enough evidence to show that Oulson was threatening Reeves; In fact, video from the theater showed Reeves lunging at Oulson, not the other way around.

(Reeves) also appeared quite self-assured when he was testifying, and certainly did not appear to be a man who was afraid of anyone, she wrote in her decision.

Stand your ground or shoot first?

Florida passed its stand your ground statute in 2005, becoming the first state in the nation to implement such aggressive self-defense legislation.

Usually, anyone who feels attacked has a duty to retreat and remove themselves from an altercation (if they have a safe way to do so) before resorting to self-defense violence. But the stand your ground doctrine says its every citizens right to stand up for him or herself: Citizens can use deadly force as soon as they fear for their lives or wellbeing even if they have a safe way to get away.

Stand your ground proponents claim that no one should be forced to retreat when they are attacked, and claim the law removes the long legal proceedings necessary to vindicate those who use deadly force in self-defense.

Critics sometimes call the statue a shoot first law, insisting that not only is the law unnecessary federal and state laws already include the concept of self-defense but also dangerous, since it may encourage people to resort to violence when there are still other options on the table.

Since Florida passed the law, more than 20 other states have followed suit with similar stand your ground laws.

The acquittal of George Zimmerman in the 2012 shooting death of Trayvon Martin is most famously and mistakenly attributed to Floridas stand your ground law.

While Zimmerman claimed he killed unarmed teenager Martin in self-defense, his legal team never invoked the stand your ground law. They insisted that killing the teen was Zimmermans only option, and Stand your ground only applies if theres a nonviolent way to end the threat. However, while Zimmerman did not invoke the law, it was included in the jurys deliberation instructions.

Between 2005 and 2013 there were more than 200 cases in Florida that used the stand your ground defense.

More protection for stand your ground invokers

Reeves bid for stand your ground immunity was denied because he could not prove that he was acting in self-defense but some Florida lawmakers want to flip the burden of proof to the prosecution.

A bill in Floridas Senate would require that prosecutors prove that a stand your ground defendant was not acting in self-defense. Essentially, it would give those who use deadly force even more protection, because they would not be responsible for showing that their actions were justified.

Sen. Rob Bradley, who introduced the bill, said that its not a novel concept, because in other court cases, prosecutors must prove the case, while the defendant is presumed innocent and must beproven guilty.

We have a tradition in our criminal justice system that the burden of proof is with the government from the beginning of the case to the end, he said, though so-called affirmative defenses like stand your ground, the more general self-defense argument and diminished capacity actually do require that defendant meet a burden of proof.

If the bill passes, it would be another self-defense first in Floridas history. Only four other states with stand your ground laws mention the burden of proof in their statues, and all of them say it falls on the defense, not the prosecution.

A vote in Floridas Senate is expected as early as Friday.

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'Stand your ground' defense denied for ex-cop in theater killing - Fox 59

Quick thinking store clerk exercises Second Amendment rights when confronted by armed robber – TheBlaze.com

A quick thinking convenience store clerk in Ohio recently used his Second Amendment rights when a would-be armed robber pulled a weapon to rob him.

According to WTTE-TV, 27-year-old Emanuel Hamm walked into the M&M Food Mart in Darbydale, Ohio, Thursday night around 9:30 p.m. with plans to rob the store. But the quick thinking clerk, who wished to remain anonymous, derailed those plans.

He pulled a gun and said give me the money, the clerk told WTTE, recounting the events.

As soon as I saw the gun, I pulled mine and I shot him, the clerk explained. That was the first thing that came to my mind when I saw the gun. I thought of my kids. Somebody thought it was an easy target and it wasnt.

Surveillance footage caught the incident on tape. It shows Hamm walking into the store with one hand in his pocket. The video shows the clerk, suspicious of Hamm, put his hand on a gun in his back pocket. When Hamm finally draws his weapon, the clerk was able to draw first, shooting and injuring Hamm. Hamm is then seen scrambling for the door.

Store owner Aziz Khettab told WTTE that after his store was robbed three times last year, he decided to finally buy a gun so he and his clerks could protect the store, its customers and his source of income.

Hamm was able to get away, despite being shot in the hand. But after he appeared at a local hospital with a gunshot wound, which WTTE reports was not life-threatening, police arrested him and charged him with aggravated robbery.

Still, the store clerk told WTTE that he feels bad for injuring Hamm.

It was really tough, he told WTTE. Its not easy to shoot someone, especially with someone who never had to deal with guns.

I feel bad for him, but I didnt have a choice, the clerk explained.

Watch the surveillance footage below via WTTE:

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Quick thinking store clerk exercises Second Amendment rights when confronted by armed robber - TheBlaze.com