- The IRS says it's canceling stimulus checks sent to dead people and they no longer need to be returned.
- A government report in June found the agency had distributed $1.4 billion to dead people, though that made up a small portion of the overall $269 billion federal payout.
- Congress and the Trump administration are now debating whether to send a second round of direct payments for Americans.
The IRS said it was canceling stimulus checks issued to dead people and that the payments no longer needed to be sent back after a review of its procedures. The agency previously said family members of the deceased would have to return the checks.
In March, Congress authorized a wave of direct $1,200 payments for people earning up to $75,000 a year, plus $500 for each dependent child under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. Joint filers could get the full check if they earned up to $150,000. A family of four was eligible to receive $3,400.
In a scramble to get the direct payments out the door as quickly as possible starting in mid-April, the IRS sent $1.4 billion in federal cash to dead people, a recent report from the Government Accountability Office found. But that made up a sliver of the $269 billion government payout that has reached 160 million Americans.
Congress and the Trump administration are now weighing a second round of direct payments as debate ramps up on another economic relief package. President Donald Trump supports additional checks.
Republicans are weighing whether to tighten the eligibility for people to get the government cash, The Washington Post reported. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said last week stimulus checks could be sent to people earning $40,000 and under. But that step could leave out as many as 20 million Americans.
Democrats, on the other hand, are pushing for another round of stimulus checks with the same income thresholds under the CARES Act.