Archives for June 2013

Cause of Action Sues IRS for Records of Communications between the White House and IRS

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                   CONTACT:      

June 20, 2013                                                                                     Jamie Morris, 202-499-2425

 

Cause of Action Sues IRS for Records of Communications between

the White House and IRS

IRS refuses to reveal whether the White House has improperly received individuals’ tax return information

WASHINGTON – Cause of Action (CoA), a government accountability organization, yesterday filed a lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for its wrongful withholding and redaction of documents involving records of communications between the White House and the IRS. These documents would reveal whether the President requested tax records of individuals and businesses outside the legally permitted process under the tax code.

“While this Administration claims to be the most transparent in American history, it is ultimately unwilling to disclose to the American people whether the President improperly accessed confidential tax information of individuals and companies,” stated Dan Epstein, Cause of Action’s executive director.  “We aren’t asking for the tax records themselves—only the requests. What is the Administration trying to hide?”

CoA filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request in October 2012 for records of communication between the White House and the IRS concerning taxpayer information, particularly communications that were not made pursuant to 6103(g) of the tax code, which authorizes the President to request any individual’s tax return information from the IRS. On March 4, 2013, the IRS issued its final response—and with it, only partial records, thereby obstructing the path to transparency which American taxpayers were promised. CoA filed suit against the IRS, declaring that the IRS has wrongfully withheld the requested records, directing the IRS to revise its search and provide full records of communications from the White House to the IRS involving requests for tax returns.

The complaint, along with our exhibits, can be found here.

About Cause of Action:

Cause of Action is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that uses investigative, legal, and communications tools to educate the public on how government accountability and transparency protects taxpayer interests and economic opportunity. For more information, visit www.causeofaction.org.

 

To schedule an interview with Cause of Action’s Executive Director Dan Epstein,

contact Jamie Morris, jamie.morris@causeofaction.org.

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IRS FOIA Complaint

Complaint

Exhibits

ECF No 1-1_Civil Cover Sheet

ECF No 1-2_Summons to IRS_not executed by clerk

 

CFPB advises employees to FOIA-proof their work calendars

Updated: May 22, 2014 with the full CFPB FOIA Brochure

“Transparency is at the core of our agenda, and it is a key part of how we operate.   You deserve to know what the new bureau is doing for the American public and how we are doing it.” 

 CFPB Website

“Keep your calendar entries brief and general. If possible, avoid annotating entries with agendas, detail discussions, etc.

Minimize attachments to your calendar appointments. Consider using email to send related attachments.”

CFPB FOIA Team to CFPB employees

 

CFPB employees have been advised by its FOIA staff to keep their work calendars “brief and general” and to remove meetings to which they “were invited but did not attend,” according to a list of calendar tips obtained by Cause of Action.

These “Recommended Calendar DOs and DON’Ts” further suggest that employees “avoid annotating entries with agendas, detailed discussions,” and “minimize attachments to your calendar appointments.”  Consistent with such advice, the leadership calendars posted (and touted) by CFPB are noticeably devoid of details.

These calendar tips undoubtedly make it easier for the bureau’s FOIA staff to process any requested calendars.  However, they also undermine the Administration’s asserted commitment to creating “an unprecedented level of openness in Government.”  Additionally, this behind-the-scenes advice indicates that transparency at CFPB is not actually a “key mission,” as claimed.  Rather than full disclosure, the name of the game at CFPB obviously is partial disclosure lite.

Related: FOIA requests have found that the IRS and the DOJ are more concerned with their public image than they are with completing FOIA requests in accordance with the law.

CFPB FOIA Calendar Brochure by CauseOfAction

CFPB FOIA Insiders Guide 2013 by CauseOfAction

CFPB FOIA Email Focus 2013 by CauseOfAction

Lack of IRS Oversight Lead to Fraud, Money Laundering, and Abuse by Tax-Exempt Groups

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                 CONTACT:      

June 17, 2013                                                                                       Jamie Morris, 202-499-2425

 

Lack of IRS Oversight Lead to

 Fraud, Money Laundering, and Abuse by Tax-Exempt Groups

Cause of Action releases investigative report on fiscal sponsorship: “Conprofit: How the IRS’s Failed Oversight Allows Nonprofit Money Laundering”

WASHINGTON – Cause of Action (CoA), a government accountability organization, today released “Conprofit: How the IRS’s Failed Oversight Allows Nonprofit Money Laundering,” a comprehensive report revealing significant loopholes in the tax code which allow nonprofits to engage in corruption, fraud, and money laundering—in some cases with federal funds. In light of these findings, Cause of Action filed a petition for rulemaking with the IRS, asking them to define and set clear parameters for the practice of fiscal sponsorship.

CoA’s fifteen-month long investigation demonstrates how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)  has consistently lacked oversight and enforcement of its Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division, the same division that has recently come under public, Congressional, and legal scrutiny for allegedly targeting applicants for 501(c)(4) status that hold specific political beliefs. The report reveals how the International Humanities Center (IHC), Christian Community, Inc. (CCI), and Help Is Here, Inc. (HIH), as well as other nonprofits, routinely used the practice of fiscal sponsorship to abuse their tax-exempt status, and in some cases even commit fraud.

“Conprofit: How the IRS’s Failed Enforcement Allows Nonprofit Money Laundering” exposes how these groups subverted the original intent of fiscal sponsorship, which is to create opportunities for charitable projects to start their endeavors under existing nonprofit groups. Instead, “Conprofit: How the IRS’s Failed Oversight Allows Nonprofit Money Laundering” documents fraud, corruption, and money laundering happening under the guise of fiscal sponsorship.

Some of the most egregious examples of fiscal sponsorship abuse:

  • IHC sponsored over 200 projects as a fiscal sponsor then collapsed after funneling almost $1 million in project funding toward its own mismanaged debts.
  • HIH preyed upon projects, improperly seizing funds, refusing to disburse funding to projects, and attempting to wrest control over projects which attempted to leave.
  • CCI posed as a fiscal sponsor for twenty years.  Tax documents, audits, and bank statements were fabricated and over $400,000 in project funding was lost.

 

Cause of Action’s Executive Director Dan Epstein explained the consequences of these findings:

“Cause of Action has exposed yet another layer of mismanagement and lack of oversight at the IRS.  This report exposes how the IRS engaged in selective enforcement, targeting certain 501(c)(3) applicants with additional scrutiny while it has approved the tax-exempt status of charities that have engaged in money laundering and fraud.

 

Significant loopholes in the tax code have opened the door to abuse for organizations to funnel money, fabricate tax documents, and destroy charities by abusing fiscal sponsorship. We now turn to Congress and the IRS to define fiscal sponsorship and remove the ambiguities which have allowed groups such as IHC, CCI, and HIH to exploit and defraud American taxpayers.”

 

Click here to read a full copy of the report.

About Cause of Action:

Cause of Action is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that uses investigative, legal, and communications tools to educate the public on how government accountability and transparency protects taxpayer interests and economic opportunity. For more information, visit www.causeofaction.org.

To schedule an interview with Cause of Action’s Executive Director Dan Epstein, contact Jamie Morris, jamie.morris@causeofaction.org.

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REPORT: Conprofit: How the IRS’s Failed Oversight Allows Nonprofit Money Laundering

I. Executive Summary

We will continue to work tirelessly with our partners from SIPC, the FBI, and the IRS, to track down any and all proceeds of Madoff’s Ponzi scheme and return them to their rightful owners. . .The investigation of prodigious fraud, like that of Madoff, remains one of the FBI’s top priorities. From robbers to fraudsters, the FBI will continue to bring to justice crooks who steal.” 

-Preet Bhara, U.S. Attorney

 “Nonetheless, there are some investigations underway. The California attorney general’s office has received sufficient complaints to have begun its own investigation. . . . . [C]ontacts have been made with the FBI and the Los Angeles district attorney. . . . Meanwhile, these projects will have to track down known donors, explain the details of what amounts to a fiscal sponsorship Ponzi scheme, and hope that the donors will be willing to ante up more money to make up what was lost.”

-Nonprofit Quarterly

 

The two above quotes may sound like depictions of the same problem, but the first statement was made by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara concerning the money laundering, embezzlement, and fraud of white collar criminal Bernie Madoff.  The second, however, came from a Nonprofit Quarterly article about the nonprofit International Humanities Center that defrauded over 200 projects it sponsored and ran off with nearly $1 million.

While the IRS’s recent attention has been focused on scrutinizing tax-exempt applications, it has approved the tax-exempt status of charities that have engaged in money laundering and fraud. This system of abuse involves CEOs and corporate fraud, but its culprit cannot be found on Wall Street or in the boardrooms of large, publicly-traded corporations.  This fraud occurs in small, tax-exempt nonprofits, often run by one or two individuals who have discovered an opening in the tax code that allows them to dupe unsuspecting start-up charities and fly under the radar of an over-complicated tax code.

What follows in this report, based on Cause of Action’s fifteen-month investigation, is an account of a dangerous pattern of abuse that has destroyed jobs and ruined charities whose aim was the public good.  This abuse, combined with fabricated tax documents and bank statements and the mismanagement of federal grant money, paints a picture of corruption protected under the auspices of a process called fiscal sponsorship that is unmanaged, unchecked, and undefined by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Whether through Congress or IRS rulemaking, the abuse of fiscal sponsorship warrants correction to protect taxpayers and charities. By clearly defining the parameters and standards of fiscal sponsorship, the IRS can alleviate its backlog of failed oversight of tax-exempt groups and prevent future non-profit Ponzi schemes.

Fiscal sponsorship was intended for good, but is being used for harm

When individuals seek to establish a new charity, they often apply for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status in order to receive tax-exempt donations.  However, many projects only intend to exist temporarily and therefore have no incentive to seek formal tax-exempt status.  Other projects may require donations while their tax-exempt applications are being processed.  Fiscal sponsorship solves these problems by allowing existing tax-exempt organizations to accept grants and donations on behalf of the charity, or “project.”  As reflected by the current IRS scandal, the process for attaining tax-exempt status can be lengthy and arduous. For groups that either cannot afford the time or money to attain their own status before wanting to conduct their charitable activities, or have no desire to become an independent organization, fiscal sponsorship allows them to come under the umbrella of an existing non-profit organization.

But despite the benefits of fiscal sponsorship, we see in the cases of International Humanities Center (IHC), Christian Community, Inc. (CCI), and Help Is Here, Inc. (HIH) that these organizations were able to use the practice of fiscal sponsorship to abuse their tax exempt status, and in some cases even commit fraud.

IHC served as a fiscal sponsor for over 200 projects, funneling almost $1 million in project funding toward its own mismanaged debts before closing its doors.

Though IHC’s overall structure was not necessarily illegal, the organization may not have abided by the law governing sponsored projects’ individual transactions, and while the IRS was conducting an audit at the time of its collapse in 2011, former IHC employees reported to Cause of Action that the agency had focused on smaller issues and missed the fundamental problem which plagued IHC: uncontrolled and unaccountable spending.

IHC came under federal investigation for the potential mismanagement of federal grant money.

Through a Department of Energy program under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Cause of Action found that IHC potentially improperly accepted federal grant funds intended for one of its sponsored projects, ultimately resulting in a DOE investigation. A criminal and civil case was pending against IHC as of April 2012 and DOE was considering debarring high-level IHC officials.

CCI fabricated tax documents, audits, and bank statements, costing its projects over $400,000 in lost funding.

CCI’s director, Steven Clapp, ran the fiscal sponsor organization for twenty years with little repercussion for his fraudulent activities.  For instance, Clapp told projects that he withheld Social Security taxes but never actually submitted the withholdings.  He also failed to file accurate 990 forms with the IRS.  When a former employee of one of CCI’s projects attempted to verify forms, payments, and legal filings by CCI, she discovered “nothing but fake colored pieces of paper.”  Prior to joining CCI, Clapp himself spent over four years in prison for bank fraud in Illinois for forging financial statements in order to obtain loans to support his business. Despite a history of financial fraud, the IRS was only alerted to potential problems at CCI when the organization failed to file its tax forms.

HIH preyed upon projects, improperly seizing funds, refusing to disburse funding to projects, and attempting to wrest control over projects which attempted to leave.

Under the leadership of Maggie Lane-Baker, HIH mismanaged funds intended for its projects which, without oversight by the IRS, were forced to take HIH to court.  HIH not only attempted to seize donations, but also claimed control over the charitable projects themselves.  When one project attempted to end its agreement with HIH, the request was denied.  While Lane-Baker eventually acknowledged that she confiscated $50,000 in funding, she claimed HIH was justified in keeping the funds.  This organization not only mismanaged money, but caused its sponsored projects to expend the time and resources required to initiate litigation, all of which could have been avoided with IRS oversight and a better understanding of how to properly structure a fiscal sponsorship arrangement.

Remedy

Cause of Action’s findings demonstrate a substantial lack of guidance regarding fiscal sponsorship that has subjected hundreds of charities to abuse and allowed substantial sums of donations—including federal government grants—to be mismanaged by unaccountable sponsors.

Furthermore, the IRS’s failure to properly oversee tax-exempt groups puts all projects who find themselves under a non-compliant fiscal sponsor at risk of losing funding and shutting down. Either Congress or the IRS must define fiscal sponsorship and remove ambiguities that have allowed groups such as IHC, CCI, and HIH to exploit and defraud American taxpayers through fiscal sponsorship.

 

 

Petition for IRS Rulemaking

Petition for IRS Rulemaking

Roll Call: Dan Epstein: Congress Is Not the Answer: How We Really Should Be Investigating the IRS

Congress Is Not the Answer: How We Really Should Be Investigating the IRS | Commentary

By Dan Epstein     June 11, 2013, 5 a.m.

Three congressional committees were authorized to (and seemingly did) begin investigations in 2010 of the IRS’ political targeting, yet none of them were able to reveal what the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration reported last month.

Even though TIGTA head J. Russell George has now appeared before multiple committees, no one has questioned why TIGTA chose to examine the IRS’ politicization through an audit instead of an investigation. The Inspector General Act authorizes TIGTA to obtain the production of documentary evidence by subpoenas, yet TIGTA issued none. Item 2 of Treasury Order 115-01 authorizes TIGTA to conduct investigations, issue subpoenas, bring criminal enforcement actions and make referrals to the attorney general for prosecution. Yet none of this happened.

The much-publicized House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on the subject revealed that former IRS Exempt Organizations Director Lois Lerner may have improperly received immunity by taking the Fifth only after pleading her innocence in an opening statement. The White House has claimed executive privilege, refusing to provide information to congressional oversight committees — and without independent prosecutorial authority, Congress can do little other than issue contempt charges, which this administration views as little more than a slap on the wrist. When Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. denied Congress information concerning the “Fast and Furious” scandal, Congress issued a subpoena, held him in contempt, then filed a civil lawsuit, which, as of March, is in mediation; most recently, the DOJ has filed motions to dismiss the case entirely.

Chairmen of both the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee have authority under the tax code to investigate the IRS issues. Under federal law, the Ways and Means Republicans in the House must keep their investigation secret from Finance Republicans in the Senate just like the Senate Finance Democrats must not share protected information with Ways and Means Democrats. That means that not only is there a self-imposed limit to what Congress can do, there is the added dimension of partisanship: both Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., are forced to keep Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, in the dark.

If partisanship were not an issue, Congress should have established a committee that under 6103(f)(3) could be empowered with virtually unlimited investigative authority. But that hasn’t happened. Additionally, Congress always has the ability to appoint its own special counsel to investigate the IRS, as well as hire an outside counsel to advise it in its investigations. That hasn’t happened either.

Congress, in 1999, took away DOJ’s power to demand the D.C. Circuit appoint an independent counsel with prosecutorial power equal to the attorney general when high-ranking officials in the federal government engaged in criminal wrongdoing. However, the attorney general (or acting attorney general, in cases in which the attorney general is recused) is still authorized to appoint a special counsel when a criminal investigation of a person or matter is warranted so long as two conditions are met: an investigation or prosecution by a U.S. Attorney’s Office or litigating division of the DOJ would present a conflict of interest, and the public interest requires appointment of counsel independent from the DOJ. We therefore can infer that Holder’s decision to not appoint a special counsel, and instead ask the FBI to investigate the IRS, suggests that Holder believes no “conflict of interest” exists and it’s not in “the public interest” to have any outside scrutiny of the IRS.

Having exhausted the legislative and executive branch options, only the courts are left. Rule 53 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure would allow the federal courts, especially those hearing any of the current challenges to the IRS by tea party groups, to appoint what is called a “special master” to perform investigative and enforcement duties consented to by the parties in the dispute. This also includes authority to conduct an evidentiary hearing and exercise the appointing court’s power to compel, take and record evidence. With a gridlocked Congress and a White House pleading ignorance, the judiciary may be the only government institution capable of providing the thorough and accurate government accountability the American people deserve.

Dan Epstein is the executive director for Cause of Action.