Search Results for: IRS

The IRS Strikes Back: Cause of Action Prepares for Its Next Battle on White House Access to Tax Information

Cause of Action’s battle continues against the IRS’s chief auditor (TIGTA) to publicize unauthorized disclosures to the White House.  Yesterday, TIGTA released 31 pages, 27 of which are already publicly available. In sum, TIGTA has produced only about one percent of the documents responsive to CoA’s request despite the court’s ruling mandating disclosure.

The records released show that TIGTA was concerned about inquiries from “external stakeholders,” including the White House and the Department of the Treasury, following media reports that TIGTA had opened an investigation into whether Koch Industries’ tax information was illegally disclosed to Austan Goolsbee.  See the full production here.

After Cause of Action’s 2012 public records (FOIA) request concerning investigations into unauthorized disclosures of taxpayer information to the White House, TIGTA refused to confirm the existence of any records, so we took them to court. The Court ruled in CoA’s favor in September and TIGTA claimed that it was reviewing 2509 pages of documents to comply with a court order.  On December 1, 2014, TIGTA indicated that after review, 2043 pages were responsive to Cause of Action’s request, but it refused to produce actual records. TIGTA claimed the records were protected under Section 6103, a provision in the tax code requiring the confidentiality of tax returns or return information relating to a taxpayer’s actual or potential tax liability.

The IRS’s auditor (TIGTA) indicated that it would address the remaining 466 pages within two weeks.  On December 15, 2014, TIGTA withheld 435 pages and released 27 pages in full and 4 pages in part, again citing Section 6103 as the basis for protecting nearly all of the records.  In other words: the records showing White House and IRS employees may have violated Americans’ privacy is being protected under . . . privacy laws.

Looking Ahead:

CoA will file a motion claiming TIGTA’s failure to produce all responsive documents is in violation of the law.  The Court has scheduled a briefing schedule to begin on January 30, 2015.  In the meantime, CoA will aggressively file additional FOIA requests to determine the extent of the White House’s review of taxpayer information, even outside of the context of Section 6103.   Stay tuned.

Wall Street Journal: Congress Can Pry Open a Clammed-Up IRS

Read the full story: Wall Street Journal

In March 2012 the conservative legal group Cause of Action filed a Freedom of Information request, asking the IRS for documents, including emails showing any disclosures of confidential taxpayer information to the White House. Predictably, the IRS and Treasury stonewalled the request. After the normal administrative requests and appeals failed, Cause of Action launched a federal suit. They wanted all the documents and any correspondence related to the IRS’s refusal to hand them over. The IRS responded that it was exempt from such disclosures and that releasing the files would impede its own internal investigation.

 

In September Judge Amy Berman Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled decisively against the administration. The judge, an Obama appointee, said the plaintiff is entitled to see any relevant documents and ordered the Treasury to search for them. The office of the Treasury inspector general for tax administration, which oversees the IRS, announced in late November that it had found some 2,500 relevant documents. It said it would produce them by mid-December.

National Review: A Conservative Nonprofit Corners the IRS

Read the full story: National Review

The Internal Revenue Service might be done in by a group of the type it has been accused of targeting, and the agency seems to know it has been tripped up.

 

Several congressional committees have tried their hand at investigating the IRS, but Cause of Action (CoA), a government watchdog group, may be the ones to put the agency in a corner. IRS and Department of Justice officials are looking for ways to get the group off their tail.

 

“We’ve set up a trap for them,” CoA president Dan Epstein tells National Review Online. “We’re literally outsmarting them.”

 

For more than a year, CoA has focused on the IRS’s inconsistent application of the Internal Revenue Code’s rule 6103, which states that private taxpayer information must be kept confidential. Through a series of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) applications, CoA methodically requested documents pertinent to the White House’s potential unlawful acquisition of such information. The IRS appears to have moved to stonewall CoA, which has not yet received the documents it requested, and Epstein says that the delays amount to the IRS’s acknowledgment to at least some wrongdoing.

Related Documents: IRS Oversight

Proposed Rulemaking FOIA Request and Lawsuit

First Amended Complaint (February 20, 2014)

IRS Complaint (February 5, 2013) Lawsuit concerning proposed rulemaking

FOIA Request to IRS regarding communications with outside groups regarding the Notice of Proposed Rule Making

IRS FOIA Request (December 24, 2013)

Comment on IRS’s Guidance for Tax-Exempt Social Welfare Organizations

February 26, 2014 IRS Comment

IQA Petition, Meeting Request, and Request for Extension on Rulemaking all filed February 5, 2014

IRS Information Quality Act Petition – seeking clarification on how the IRS determined the burdens that nonprofits would face under the proposed rule

Request for Meeting with OIRA Administrator

Comment Extension Request – asking the IRS to extend the comment period for the proposed rulemaking until after the IRS produces in full documents in response to CoA’s FOIA request

IRS Complaint Against AARP for Excessive Lobbying

Letter to the IRS 

2012 11 29 Letter to IRS re AARP, Inc.

IRS Responses

2013 1 10 IRS Response AARP, Inc

2013-1-16 IRS Response, AARP, Inc.

Washington Examiner: Feds balk at releasing docs showing IRS sharing tax returns with White House

Read the full story: Washington Examiner

Less than a week after ’fessing up that it found some 2,500 documents potentially showing that the IRS shared taxpayer returns with the White House, the Obama administration has reversed course and won’t release the trove to a group suing for access.

 

In an abrupt decision, the Treasury inspector general’s office said that the documents are covered by privacy and disclosure laws and can’t be provided to Cause of Action, despite a promise last week to hand over some 2,500.

 

The decision coincides  with publication this week of the Washington Examiner’s series,“Watchdogs, lapdogs and attack dogs,” that assesses problems with the IG system, including the tendency in some quarters to protect federal officials and agencies from critical scrutiny.

White House Press Secretary grilled on the IRS potentially sharing taxpayer records with the White House