cramer@kontron.UUCP (Clayton Cramer) (02/15/86)
There has been a lot of discussion in net.taxes (and a little in net.legal) of both: 1. IRS legal abuse 2. Constitutionality of the U.S. Tax Law A number of people have been skeptical of: 1. Congressman George Hansen's integrity 2. The sources for these awful accounts of citizen abuse by the IRS. 3. Whether the Constitutionality of the income tax is even arguable. I couldn't resist entering the fray. 1. Congressman Hansen's legal problems started shortly after he started investigating IRS practices. You may recall something similar happened the Senator Montoya from New Mexico (NOT associated with any "extreme right-wing" groups, as someone tarred Congressman Hansen) and Montoya lost the next election -- after someone leaked his tax returns to the press. Ten days after he started investigating IRS practices. Paranoid? No, must have just been a coincidence. :-) 2. The incident described in net.taxes with the couple dragged out of their VW in Alaska by IRS thugs has been adequately covered by the general news media. I've seen rather memorable photographs of the incident showing the IRS smashing in the windows of the VW and dragging the couple out over the broken glass. I'm sure a lot of liberals will have all sorts of excuses for this (after all, they were collecting taxes), but I for one can't imagine ANY SORT of tax dispute in which the government has any reason to endanger someone like that. Also, the incidents in Congressman Hansen's book are adequately footnoted with a variety of local newspapers -- not just the tax resistance movement's literature. 3. Concerning the Constitutionality of the income tax, it seems clear that while the 16th Amendment provides legal basis for the income tax, there are some legitimate questions whether the 16th Amendment provides legal authority for mandatory tax withholding and graduated income taxes. One of the tax resistance groups in Michigan (We The People) several years ago makes the claim that while the 16th Amendment provides legal authority to collect individual income taxes, it didn't provide authority to collect tax on any basis besides a head tax. (The Constitution originally prohibited taxation not apportioned by state, except for a head tax.) Certainly the argument isn't completely bogus. (For a completely bogus anti-tax claim, there are tax resistance groups that claim that the Constitution only allows money to be gold or silver. They are wrong -- the Constitution gives Congress authority to print paper money.) Incidentally, We The People was accused by IRS of being anti-Semitic, and the national news media carried these accusations as fact. The head of We The People specifically denied the organization had any anti-Semitic beliefs, and mentioned that one of the board of directors was Jewish. (Some tax resistance groups in this country do have anti-Semitic leanings -- some, like Posse Comitatus are pretty plainly anti-Semitic, but that's certainly not the case with most of the tax resistance groups I'm aware of.) 4. Constitutionality of mandatory withholding: What I've read is that the IRS has never won a case on mandatory withholding of taxes. There was a factory owner in Connecticut who went along with mandatory withholding during World War II (there was no withholding before World War II). After the war, she decided to stop mandatory withholding, and very quickly ended up in court. I've read that the IRS stopped appealing the case because they were afraid that the ruling the courts were giving would become binding on the entire district of the Northeast. 5. There is a guy back east claiming that the 16th Amendment was, in fact, not properly ratified. As evidence, he cites an internal Treasury Department report from the period just after World War I that warned the Secretary of the Treasury that a number of states that had ratified the 16th Amendment had ratified it in different form than the "official" text. Most of the differences were minor punctutation and spelling errors, but some states actually ratified a substantially different text. 6. Why haven't the courts taken seriously these claims? Well, partly, a lot of lunatic fringe types have taken up a lot of court time arguing against the income tax, and partly because the judges get paid on checks from the Treasury Department. I have a slight acquaintance who, when he and his lawyer went to court to challenge the Constitutionality of one aspect of the tax code, the Federal District judge who was hearing the case claimed that he didn't have the legal authority to find a law un-Constitutional! (For those who don't know -- any Federal judge can do so). 7. How many of you remember when the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination was removed from application to tax cases? It was covered in all the newspapers about two years ago, in a case originating in Sacramento. A guy who was being pursued by the Criminal Investigation Division of IRS refused to testify about his financial affairs and records on the grounds he might tend to incriminate himself. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 (Thurgood Marshall dissenting) that the self-incrimination protection would put "an unreasonable burden... on the Federal Government" in tax cases. Funny, I thought that was the reason for the Fifth Amendment, and the rest of the Bill of Rights, was to put an unreasonable burden of proof on the government. A number of you may recall the case early in 1985, also in Northern California, where the IRS sent a request for information to an airline pilot about his business expenses for some rental property. He failed to respond to the request for information (which was a mistake). A month later he received a bill for $80,000 in back taxes (which IRS has since admitted was wrong -- he didn't owe them anything). They also attached his bank accounts and garnished his wages as part of a "jeopardy assessment" -- the IRS way of making sure you don't run off to South America without paying them. They did much the same thing with his house, prohibiting him from entering his own home. Then our friend the pilot did the second stupid thing -- he wrote a letter saying effectively, "This is my house, and any IRS agent that tries to take it away from without a court order better know that I've got a shotgun behind the door." Note that he didn't threaten any particular IRS agent -- he just said, "if you don't have a court judgement, you are a common criminal and I will treat you as such." Well, the Congress had passed a new law, effective January 1, 1985, that allows the courts to hold a person WITHOUT BAIL if they are a threat to public safety. This pilot, without a criminal history, was held without bail, under this law. First person to be held that way in California under this new Federal law. After about ten days his attorney persuaded the courts that the guy wasn't dangerous and got bailed out. Of course, he lost his job. The stress of living illegally in their own home contributed to his wife committing suicide. Let me stress, while the pilot did some stupid things, he didn't actually owe the IRS any back taxes. Now, both of these horrible examples aren't out of the anti-tax movement -- the Fifth Amendment being taken away was carried in a lot of newspapers, including the San Francisco Chronicle, where I saw it (and clipped it -- why in just a moment). 8. Do the courts protect our liberties? No, and it isn't just tax cases. How many of you remember last year when a court in Denver issued a prior restraint order against West Publishing (the people that publish the law books you find in just about all libraries West of the Missisippi)? A judge had accused the Federal prosecutors of improper actions in a decision involving a tax case. The Federal prosecutors found a judge, and then an appellate court panel, to prohibit West Publishing from publishing the judge's decision! I don't know what the final outcome was on that case (of course, I'm not so sure the newspapers haven't been prevented from publishing about it), but the fact that a judge's decision could be prior restrained is real scary. This case was also reported by the San Francisco Chronicle. I've gone on a long time beating this dead horse -- but those of you who are so sure that our civil liberties are intact have got your heads inserted into Fantasyland.
eli@vcvax1.UUCP (eli) (02/18/86)
> There has been a lot of discussion in net.taxes (and a little in net.legal) > of both: > > 1. IRS legal abuse > 2. Constitutionality of the U.S. Tax Law > > > 1. Congressman Hansen's legal problems started shortly after he started > investigating IRS practices. You may recall something similar happened > the Senator Montoya from New Mexico (NOT associated with any "extreme > right-wing" groups, as someone tarred Congressman Hansen) and Montoya > lost the next election -- after someone leaked his tax returns to the > press. Ten days after he started investigating IRS practices. Paranoid? > No, must have just been a coincidence. :-) Yea, and I have this great bridge in downtown NY for sale. > A number of you may recall the case early in 1985, also in Northern > California, where the IRS sent a request for information to an airline > pilot about his business expenses for some rental property. He failed > to respond to the request for information (which was a mistake). A month > later he received a bill for $80,000 in back taxes (which IRS has since > admitted was wrong -- he didn't owe them anything). They also attached > his bank accounts and garnished his wages as part of a "jeopardy > assessment" -- the IRS way of making sure you don't run off to South > America without paying them. They did much the same thing with his > house, prohibiting him from entering his own home. Then our friend > the pilot did the second stupid thing -- he wrote a letter saying > effectively, "This is my house, and any IRS agent that tries to take > it away from without a court order better know that I've got a shotgun > behind the door." Note that he didn't threaten any particular IRS agent -- > he just said, "if you don't have a court judgement, you are a common > criminal and I will treat you as such." > > Well, the Congress had passed a new law, effective January 1, 1985, that > allows the courts to hold a person WITHOUT BAIL if they are a threat to > public safety. This pilot, without a criminal history, was held without > bail, under this law. First person to be held that way in California > under this new Federal law. After about ten days his attorney persuaded > the courts that the guy wasn't dangerous and got bailed out. > What!? What kind of law is this? Does this mean that the courts are empowered to take anyone off the street, with or without a criminal charge against them, and lock them away for an indeterminate period of time simply by declaring them a threat? Please clarify. > Of course, he lost his job. The stress of living illegally in their > own home contributed to his wife committing suicide. Let me stress, > while the pilot did some stupid things, he didn't actually owe the IRS > any back taxes. > Lovely, next they'll have us believing it was his own fault. > 8. Do the courts protect our liberties? No, and it isn't just tax cases. > How many of you remember last year when a court in Denver issued a > prior restraint order against West Publishing (the people that publish the > law books you find in just about all libraries West of the Missisippi)? > A judge had accused the Federal prosecutors of improper actions in a > decision involving a tax case. The Federal prosecutors found a judge, > and then an appellate court panel, to prohibit West Publishing from > publishing the judge's decision! I don't know what the final outcome > was on that case (of course, I'm not so sure the newspapers haven't been > prevented from publishing about it), but the fact that a judge's decision > could be prior restrained is real scary. > > > I've gone on a long time beating this dead horse -- but those of you > who are so sure that our civil liberties are intact have got your heads > inserted into Fantasyland. Sadly I find myself in agreement. Somewhere in the list of "famous last words" should have been the sentence "It can't happen here." Someone please refute this. (I'm not holding my breath) Some questions: Is there more information about this somewhere? Where? (Not illegal to publish, I hope) How shall we undo this mess? Can it be undone, or will it perpetuate itself (ala Judges unwilling to bite the soiled hand that feeds them)? It ends up sounding like "lunatics and fringe groups", but hearing this makes me flash back to "Atlas Shrugged". "At the point of a gun" & "with the victim's consent" indeed. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Elias Israel VenturCom, Inc. 215 First St. Cambridge, MA 02142 ..!harvard!cybvax0!vcvax1!eli "Let me tell you how it will be, its one for you nineteen for me" -- "Taxman", Beatles