mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 08:19:26 -05:00
132 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
132 lines
8.2 KiB
Plaintext
|
<conspiracyFile>The IRS is here to protect our rights
|
|||
|
Or the IRS finally hears about the Miranda Case.
|
|||
|
COPYRIGHT (C) 1991 BY FULL DISCLOSURE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
|
|||
|
Phoenix businessman David Carroll was acquitted in federal court of two
|
|||
|
felony counts of assault on a federal officer. Judge Charles L. Hardy, United
|
|||
|
States District Court Judge, found Carroll not guilty after hearing the
|
|||
|
testimony from the Government's only witness, Leo Anderson, an IRS revenue
|
|||
|
officer. The case was tried before a jury, but Judge Hardy ruled there was
|
|||
|
insufficient evidence for the case to proceed further and granted the Motion
|
|||
|
for Judgment of Acquittal made in court by Carroll's attorney, Mac MacPherson
|
|||
|
of Phoenix.
|
|||
|
Carroll was charged in a two-count indictment in which the Grand Jury alleged
|
|||
|
that, on July 10, 1989, Carroll ``forcibly assaulted and resisted, opposed,
|
|||
|
impeded, intimidated and interfered with'' Anderson, who surprised Carroll at
|
|||
|
his home in effort to collect back taxes IRS claimed Carroll owed. In Count
|
|||
|
Two, the Grand Jury charged that Carroll ``by force and threats of force
|
|||
|
endeavored to intimidate and impede'' Anderson during the performance of
|
|||
|
Anderson's duties.
|
|||
|
According to Anderson, rather than write a letter or call Carroll to schedule
|
|||
|
an appointment, he intentionally surprised Carroll at his home early one
|
|||
|
Monday morning. ``Surprise him at the door - that's the way we do it,''
|
|||
|
Anderson testified on cross examination by MacPherson. Anderson explained
|
|||
|
that IRS' new emphasis is that the collection officer be productive on the
|
|||
|
first contact. ``One call does it all,'' is our new motto, Anderson stated
|
|||
|
proudly.
|
|||
|
According to Anderson, as he sat in his pickup truck in front of the Carroll
|
|||
|
residence, taking notes about Carroll's assets, the garage door opened and a
|
|||
|
man appeared. Anderson approached Carroll, identified himself and said he
|
|||
|
wanted immediate payment of $12000. With this, Carroll began to close the
|
|||
|
garage door, bumped into Anderson and continued to push Anderson back several
|
|||
|
feet. Anderson did not leave. He kept asking questions and an argument
|
|||
|
ensued. The two men walked to the sidewalk, Carroll leading the way. Anderson
|
|||
|
testified that at that point Carroll walked toward him 'slowly and
|
|||
|
deliberately' and that Anderson was impeded from getting information from
|
|||
|
Carroll, such as where he banked, where he worked and what assets he had.
|
|||
|
By this time, the men were yelling at one another and Anderson claimed that
|
|||
|
he was ``provoked, challenged, impeded'' and that he felt Carroll was trying
|
|||
|
to ``provoke him into hitting him.'' Anderson stated, ``And if I was not
|
|||
|
working, I would have hit him.''
|
|||
|
Anderson testified that, rather than fight, he decided to leave the scene. He
|
|||
|
walked to his truck, got in and started it. But before he could close the
|
|||
|
door, Carroll followed him and stood between the door and the truck. (Editors
|
|||
|
note: Most people close the door first, then start their vehicle) Carroll
|
|||
|
was still talking, but Anderson didn't listen. Anderson said, ``Back off,''
|
|||
|
and Carroll immediately moved out of the way. Anderson closed the door and
|
|||
|
drove off.
|
|||
|
Mr. Carroll had a different story to tell, which was related to judge and
|
|||
|
jury through MacPherson's opening statement: Anderson clearly violated the
|
|||
|
new Taxpayer Bill of Rights, a law enacted by Congress in November of 1988 as
|
|||
|
a result of abuse from IRS agents such as Anderson.
|
|||
|
Under the new federal law, agents are required to give to taxpayers an
|
|||
|
explanation of their rights and make sure the citizen understands their
|
|||
|
rights by way of Publication 1. ``As a taxpayer, you have the right to be
|
|||
|
treated fairly, professionally, promptly and courteously by Internal Revenue
|
|||
|
Service employees. Our goal at the IRS is to protect your rights so that you
|
|||
|
will have the highest confidence in the integrity, efficiency and fairness of
|
|||
|
our tax system. To ensure that you always receive such treatment, you should
|
|||
|
know about the many rights you have at each step of the tax process.''
|
|||
|
Anderson did not give to Carroll Publication 1, nor mention Carroll's rights,
|
|||
|
which include the right to tape record proceedings, the right to have copies
|
|||
|
of IRS documents and the right to enter into an installment payment agreement
|
|||
|
with IRS when the taxpayer cannot afford to pay the tax in full.
|
|||
|
Nothing was explained by Anderson. Instead, he kept demanding that he would
|
|||
|
accept full payment of $12000 and nothing less. Through his tactics of
|
|||
|
surprise, fear and intimidation, Anderson attempted to coerce money from
|
|||
|
Carroll and get into the Carroll home without a court order. ``What will you
|
|||
|
settle for?'' Carroll kept asking. ``Full payment,'' was Anderson's repeated
|
|||
|
response.
|
|||
|
But Carroll, a man who has his own retail business and was not about to be
|
|||
|
pushed around, was not phased. He shut the garage door to protect his privacy
|
|||
|
rights and, as he did so, Anderson stepped forward and the two men -
|
|||
|
Anderson, 260 pounds, and Carroll, 220 pounds - merely bumped stomachs.
|
|||
|
Repeatedly, Carroll asked to see the documents which showed he owed the tax,
|
|||
|
and repeatedly Anderson refused. When Carroll threatened to eliminate any tax
|
|||
|
debts by filing bankruptcy, Anderson began his yelling tirade witnessed by
|
|||
|
Carroll's son, Callen, age 19, and two neighbors.
|
|||
|
But it was not the Taxpayer Bill of Rights that caused Judge Hardy to find
|
|||
|
David Carroll not guilty; it was Anderson's own admissions on cross
|
|||
|
examination by MacPherson.
|
|||
|
``You're a pretty big fellow, Mr. Anderson, and when the stomach bumping
|
|||
|
occurred, you weren't in the least bit afraid of Mr. Carroll, were you?'' To
|
|||
|
this, Anderson replied, ``No, I wasn't at all afraid.'' Anderson went on to
|
|||
|
admit that when he and Carroll left the garage for the sidewalk, it was
|
|||
|
Carroll, not Anderson, who led the way, despite Anderson's previous testimony
|
|||
|
that he ``retreated'' to his truck. Given these facts, Judge Hardy ruled that
|
|||
|
there was no assault, nor did Carroll attempt in any way to impede Anderson.
|
|||
|
The jury was thanked and dismissed.
|
|||
|
On the two-count indictment, David Carroll faced a maximum penalty of eight
|
|||
|
years in jail and a fine of $100000.
|
|||
|
MacPherson, a certified tax specialist and certified criminal law specialist,
|
|||
|
has tried over 50 criminal tax cases in federal court in twenty-three
|
|||
|
different states and is author of Tax Fraud & Evasion: The War Stories. War
|
|||
|
Stories chronicles many of his winning cases, and MacPherson states that the
|
|||
|
Carroll case will be an added chapter to War Stories, Part II, which
|
|||
|
MacPherson is now writing for release this summer. The theme of War Stories:
|
|||
|
citizens should not be fearful of their own Government (the IRS); they can
|
|||
|
eliminate fear, and its stepchild intimidation, by coming to an understanding
|
|||
|
of how the criminal tax system works. This can best be done by actual case
|
|||
|
histories.
|
|||
|
Donald MacPherson can be contacted at 3404 W. Cheryl Drive, Suite A-250,
|
|||
|
Phoenix, AZ 85051.
|
|||
|
The above is reprinted from Full Disclosure Newspaper. Subscribe today and
|
|||
|
get interesting articles like the above, plus more... pictures, graphics,
|
|||
|
advertisement, and more articles. Full Disclosure is your source for
|
|||
|
information on the leading edge of surveillance technology. Print the
|
|||
|
following form, or supply the information on a plain piece of paper:
|
|||
|
<div>
|
|||
|
Please start my subscription to Full Disclosure for:
|
|||
|
[ ] Sample issue, $2.00
|
|||
|
[ ] 12 issue subscription, $18.00
|
|||
|
[ ] 24 issue subscription, $29.95
|
|||
|
With 24 issue susbcription include free one of the following:
|
|||
|
[ ] Directory of Electronic Surveillance Equipment Suppliers
|
|||
|
[ ] Citizen's Guide on How to Use the Freedom of Info/Privacy Acts
|
|||
|
[ ] Maximizing PC Performance
|
|||
|
Also available separately:
|
|||
|
[ ] Directory of Electronic Surveillance Equipment Suppliers, $6.00
|
|||
|
[ ] Citizen's Guide on How to Use the Freedom of Info/Privacy Acts, $5.00
|
|||
|
[ ] Maximizing PC Performance, $6.00
|
|||
|
Illinois residences, add 6.5% sales tax on above 3 items.
|
|||
|
Enclosed is payment in the form of:
|
|||
|
[ ] Check/Money order, [ ] Visa, [ ] Mastercard
|
|||
|
Card no:<div> Exp date:<div>
|
|||
|
Signature:<div>
|
|||
|
Phone:<div>
|
|||
|
(required for credit card orders)
|
|||
|
My name/address:
|
|||
|
Name:<div>
|
|||
|
Street:<div>
|
|||
|
City/State/Zip:<div>
|
|||
|
Return to: Full Disclosure, Box 903, Libertyville, Illinois 60048
|
|||
|
</conspiracyFile>
|