Georgia has the country’s second-highest number of fraudulent tax refund claims.

U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson in an Oct. 21st press release

Many of us wonder whether we’re exposing ourselves to identity theft with credit card and debit card purchases, especially after security breaches at some big-box retailers.

Identity theft is generally considered the fastest-growing crime in America, so that’s probably not so far-fetched. But in reality, authorities say, identity thieves for the past several years have focused increasingly on income tax fraud.

The Internal Revenue Service estimates that it paid $5.2 billion in fraudulent refunds in 2013 and caught an additional $24.2 billion of such refunds, according to a September report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Last month, a bipartisan group of U.S. senators — including Georgia’s Johnny Isakson — called on IRS Commissioner John Koskinsen to update Congress on the agency’s efforts to stop tax refund fraud related to identity theft.

“Tax frauds costs hardworking Americans billions of dollars and further undermines taxpayers’ confidence in our taxpayer system,” said Isakson, a member of the Senate Finance Committee who is set to announce re-election plans next week.

In a press release, Isakson said he has continually pressed the IRS on the issue, noting that

“Georgia ranks second-highest in the country in the number of fraudulent tax refund claims.”

Could that be right? We decided to check.

Amanda Maddox, Isakson’s spokeswoman, said the statement was based on data from the Federal Trade Commission and backed up with information from the IRS.

The FTC report that Maddox supplied us is based on “unverified complaints reported by consumers” during 2013.

The report shows Florida had the highest number of identity theft complaints per capita at 192.9 per 1,000 residents. Georgia was second with 134.1 per thousand, or 13,402, followed by California, Michigan and Nevada.

But that includes all types of identity theft complaints. It also doesn’t include any individual state data on complaints about identity theft related to income tax fraud — what Isakson’s talking about.

Maddox told PolitiFact that information she’d just received from the IRS showed Georgia ranked third in per-capita tax-related identity theft (at 0.7 percent in both 2012 and 2014).

Tax fraud from identity theft with Georgia connections has made headlines both inside and outside the state.

In April, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced that 56 people had been charge or already pleaded guilty in a stolen ID and tax fraud scheme based out of Statesboro.

Just last month, a Georgia man pleaded guilty to his role in a $2 million tax refund conspiracy that used state prison inmates’ identities to create bogus tax returns in 2010 and 2011. Three women – all from Georgia – had already pleaded guilty to wire fraud in the case.

In January, the IRS announced that Georgia, Florida and the District of Columbia had been chosen for the pilot program because they see “the highest per-capita percentage of tax-related identity theft.”

Yet Mark Green, an IRS spokesman in Atlanta, said: “There is no ranking per se.”

The IRS does not have any state-level data that would show exactly how Georgia, or any state, fares in the overall problem, he said.

Maddox provided a spreadsheet from April 2013, which she said the IRS gave to the Senate Special Committee on Aging. The spreadsheet, which the IRS confirmed was its data, showed that Georgia ranked No. 3 in enforcement action against identity theft, with 156 enforcement actions.

But the data do not match up with other IRS data, including the presumptive top three problem spots targeted with the pilot program.

The spreadsheet shows the top three, in order, are Florida (443), Puerto Rico (374) and then Georgia.

The District of Columbia, part of the pilot program for supposedly having a serious problem, shows just one enforcement action. That ties it with five other jurisdictions for the least enforcement actions taken in fiscal 2013.

Karen Barney, a spokeswoman for the Identity Resource Center in San Diego, said Georgia was second behind Florida for the past three years in complaints about identity theft involving government documents or benefits fraud.

Again, that references complaints, not verifiable instances. When it comes to the federal income tax problems that Isakson references, the answers are not as clear.

Our conclusion: Isakson’s claim that Georgia ranks second when it comes to fraudulent tax refund claims is based on at least one federal report.

But that report examines complaints, not verifiable incidents.

To be certain, Georgia has a serious problem. The senator would have been accurate if he had said as much, or said that Georgia shows near the top of states with such problems.

But Isakson misreads that data to show a specific rank where none exists.

We rate his claim Half True.