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Did you know the IRS can legally force you to pay your ex-spouse's tax debt, even years after your divorce was finalized? Most people have no idea there are three legal defenses specifically designed to stop this. Here's what most people get wrong: they think their divorce decree protects them. "The judge said my ex is responsible for the taxes, so I'm safe." Wrong. Your divorce agreement is a contract between you and your ex. The IRS was never part of that deal. If your name is on that joint return, the IRS can and will come after you for the full amount, no matter what your divorce papers say. I've seen it over and over. People who did nothing wrong, who trusted their spouse to handle the finances, now getting collection letters, wage garnishments, and bank levies for a debt they didn't create. And most of them believe there's nothing they can do. That's the real problem. Here are the three defenses you don't want to miss: • Defense number one: Innocent Spouse Relief - This is your strongest weapon if your ex hid income, fabricated deductions, or manipulated the return without your knowledge. The IRS understands that one spouse can control the finances and deceive the other. If you can show you had no reason to know about the errors, you can be released from the entire debt. But there's a critical deadline most people miss, and if you blow it, this option disappears. • Defense number two: Separation of Liability Relief - This one is specifically for people who are divorced, legally separated, or have been living apart for at least 12 months. Instead of holding you responsible for the full amount, the IRS is forced to split the debt based on who actually earned the income and who took the improper deductions. Your ex ran a business and hid cash? That's their share, not yours. But you have to qualify, and the IRS will verify your separation status down to mortgage records and utility bills. • Defense number three: Equitable Relief - This is the safety net for situations where the first two don't apply. Maybe all the income was reported correctly, but your spouse simply never paid the taxes and you had no idea. If forcing you to pay would create severe economic hardship, and you received no benefit from the unpaid taxes, this defense can protect you. It's broader and more flexible, but the IRS has much more discretion, which means how you present your case matters more than ever. I'm Pietro Canestrelli. I used to work as an IRS attorney in Washington, D.C. I've sat on the other side of these cases. I know exactly what the IRS reviewers look for when they evaluate Form 8857. I know what evidence strengthens a case, what mistakes lead to automatic denials, and what arguments actually move the needle. Here's what I'll tell you from the inside. Most people who file on their own get denied. Not because they don't qualify, but because they don't present the case correctly. They miss critical documentation. They check the wrong box. They fail to include the evidence that would have changed the outcome. A denial is hard to overturn. The time to get this right is the first time. If you're carrying tax debt from a marriage that's over, the law is on your side, but you need to act before deadlines pass and penalties keep growing. Call us right now at 951-319-7674 for a free consultation and I'll tell you exactly which defense applies to your case and what it takes to eliminate that debt.