31 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT THE IRS [Courtesy
of The Stanley Scoop]
31 Questions and Answers about the
Internal Revenue Service, Revision 3.2 certified by Paul Andrew Mitchell,
B.A., M.S. Citizen of California, Federal Witness, Private Attorney
General, Author and Webmaster of the Supreme Law Library Common Law
Copyright All Rights Reserved without Prejudice
1. Is the Internal Revenue Service ['IRS'] an
organization within the U.S. Department of the Treasury?
Answer: No. The IRS is not an organization within the
United States Department of the Treasury. The U.S. Department of the
Treasury was organized by statutes now codified in Title 31 of the United
States Code, abbreviated '31 U.S.C.' The only mention of the IRS anywhere
in 31 U.S.C. §§ 301-310 is an authorization for the President to appoint
an Assistant General Counsel in the U.S. Department of the Treasury to be
the Chief Counsel for the IRS. See 31 U.S.C. 301[f][2.]
At footnote 23 in the case of Chrysler Corp. v. Brown,
441 U.S. 281 [1979,] the U.S. Supreme Court admitted that no organic Act
for the IRS could be found, after they searched for such an Act all the
way back to the Civil War, which ended in the year 1865 A.D. The Guarantee
Clause in the U.S. Constitution guarantees the Rule of Law to all
Americans [we are to be governed by Law and not by arbitrary bureaucrats.]
See Article IV, Section 4. Since there was no organic Act creating it, IRS
is not a lawful organization.
2. If not an organization within the U.S. Department of
the Treasury, then what exactly is the IRS?
Answer: The IRS appears to be a collection agency working
for foreign banks and operating out of Puerto Rico under color of the
Federal Alcohol Administration ['FAA'.] But the FAA was promptly declared
unconstitutional inside the 50 States by the U.S. Supreme Court in the
case of U.S. v. Constantine, 296 U.S. 287 [1935,] because Prohibition had
already been repealed.
In 1998, the United States Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit identified a second 'Secretary of the Treasury' as a man by the
name of Manual Díaz-Saldaña. See the definitions of 'Secretary' and
'Secretary or his delegate' at 27 CFR 26.11 [formerly 27 CFR 250.11,] and
the published decision in Used Tire International, Inc. v. Manual
Díaz-Saldaña, court docket number 97-2348, September 11, 1998. Both
definitions mention Puerto Rico.
When all the evidence is examined objectively, IRS
appears to be a money laundry, extortion racket, and conspiracy to engage
in a pattern of racketeering activity, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951 and
1961 et seq. ['RICO'.] Think of Puerto RICO [Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act]; in other words, it is an organized crime
syndicate operating under false and fraudulent pretenses.
3. By what legal authority, if any, has the IRS
established offices inside the 50 States of the Union?
Answer: After much diligent research, several
investigators have concluded that there is no known Act of Congress, nor
any Executive Order, giving IRS lawful jurisdiction to operate within any
of the 50 States of the Union.
Their presence within the 50 States appears to stem from
certain Agreements on Coordination of Tax Administration ['ACTA',] which
officials in those States have consummated with the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue. A template for ACTA agreements can be found at the IRS
Internet website and in the Supreme Law Library on the Internet.
However, those ACTA agreements are demonstrably
fraudulent, for example, by expressly defining 'IRS' as a lawful bureau
within the U.S. Department of the Treasury. [See Answer to Question 1
above.] Moreover, those ACTA agreements also appear to violate State laws
requiring competitive bidding before such a service contract can be
awarded by a State government to any subcontractor. There is no evidence
to indicate that ACTA agreements were reached after competitive bidding
processes; on the contrary, the IRS is adamant about maintaining a
monopoly syndicate.
4. Can IRS legally show 'Department of the Treasury' on
their outgoing mail?
Answer: No. It is obvious that such deceptive
nomenclature is intended to convey the false impression that IRS is a
lawful bureau or department within the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
Federal laws prohibit the use of United States Mail for fraudulent
purposes. Every piece of U.S. Mail sent from IRS with 'Department of the
Treasury' in the return address, is one count of mail fraud.
5. Does the U.S. Department of Justice have power of
attorney to represent the IRS in federal court?
Answer: No. Although the U.S. Department of Justice
['DOJ'] does have power of attorney to represent federal agencies before
federal courts, the IRS is not an 'agency' as that term is legally defined
in the Freedom of Information Act or in the Administrative Procedures Act.
The governments of all federal Territories are expressly excluded from the
definition of federal 'agency' by Act of Congress. See 5 U.S.C. 551[1][C.]
Since IRS is domiciled in Puerto Rico [RICO?,] it is
thereby excluded from the definition of federal agencies which can be
represented by the DOJ. The IRS Chief Counsel, appointed by the President
under authority of 31 U.S.C. 301[f][2,] can appear, or appoint a delegate
to appear in federal court on behalf of IRS and IRS employees. Again, see
the Answer to Question 1 above. As far as powers of attorney are
concerned, the chain of command begins with Congress, flows to the
President, and then to the IRS Chief Counsel, and NOT to the U.S.
Department of Justice.
6. Were the so-called 14th and 16th amendments properly
ratified?
Answer: No. Neither was properly ratified. In the case of
People v. Boxer [December 1992,] docket number #S-030016, U.S. Senator
Barbara Boxer fell totally silent in the face of an Application to the
California Supreme Court by the People of California, for an ORDER
compelling Senator Boxer to witness the material evidence against the
so-called 16th amendment.
That so-called 'amendment' allegedly authorized federal
income taxation, even though it contains no provision expressly repealing
two Constitutional Clauses mandating that direct taxes must be
apportioned. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court
have both ruled that repeals by implication are not favored. See Crawford
Fitting Co. et al. v. J.T. Gibbons, Inc., 482 U.S. 437, 442 [1987.]
The material evidence in question was summarized in
AFFIDAVIT's that were properly executed and filed in that case. Boxer fell
totally silent, thus rendering those affidavits the 'truth of the case.'
The so-called 16th amendment has now been correctly identified as a major
fraud upon the American People and the United States. Major fraud against
the United States is a serious federal offense. See 18 U.S.C. 1031.
Similarly, the so-called 14th amendment was never
properly ratified either. In the case of Dyett v. Turner, 439 P.2d 266,
270 [1968,] the Utah Supreme Court recited numerous historical facts
proving, beyond any shadow of a doubt, that the so-called 14th amendment
was likewise a major fraud upon the American People.
Those facts, in many cases, were Acts of the several
State Legislatures voting for or against that proposal to amend the U.S.
Constitution. The Supreme Law Library has a collection of references
detailing this major fraud.
The U.S. Constitution requires that constitutional
amendments be ratified by three-fourths of the several States. As such,
their Acts are governed by the Full Faith and Credit Clause in the U.S.
Constitution. See Article IV, Section 1.
Judging by the sheer amount of litigation its various
sections have generated, particularly Section 1, the so-called 14th
amendment is one of the worst pieces of legislation ever written in
American history. The phrase 'subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States' is properly understood to mean 'subject to the municipal
jurisdiction of Congress.' [See Answer to Question 19 below.]
For this one reason alone, the Congressional Resolution
proposing the so-called 14th amendment is provably vague and therefore
unconstitutional. See 14 Stat. 358-359, Joint Resolution No. 48, June 16,
1866.
7. Where are the statutes that create a specific
liability for federal income taxes?
Answer: Section 1 of the Internal Revenue Code ['IRC']
contains no provisions creating a specific liability for taxes imposed by
subtitle A. Aside from the statutes which apply only to federal government
employees, pursuant to the Public Salary Tax Act, the only other statutes
that create a specific liability for federal income taxes are those
itemized in the definition of 'Withholding agent' at IRC section
7701[a][16.] For example, see IRC section 1461. A separate liability
statute for 'employment' taxes imposed by subtitle C is found at IRC
section 3403.
After a worker authorizes a payroll officer to withhold
taxes, typically by completing Form W-4, the payroll officer then becomes
a withholding agent who is legally and specifically liable for payment of
all taxes withheld from that worker's paycheck. Until such time as those
taxes are paid in full into the Treasury of the United States, the
withholding agent is the only party who is legally liable for those taxes,
not the worker. See IRC section 7809 ['Treasury of the United States'.]
If the worker opts instead to complete a Withholding
Exemption Certificate, consistent with IRC section 3402[n,] the payroll
officer is not thereby authorized to withhold any federal income taxes. In
this latter situation, there is absolutely no liability for the worker or
for the payroll officer; in other words, there is no liability PERIOD,
specifically because there is no withholding agent.
8. Can a federal regulation create a specific liability,
when no specific liability is created by the corresponding statute?
Answer: No. The U.S. Constitution vests all legislative
power in the Congress of the United States. See Article I, Section 1. The
Executive Branch of the federal government has no legislative power
whatsoever. This means that agencies of the Executive Branch, and also the
federal Courts in the Judicial Branch, are prohibited from making law.
If an Act of Congress fails to create a specific
liability for any tax imposed by that Act, then there is no liability for
that tax. Executive agencies have no authority to cure any such omission
by using regulations to create a liability.
'[A]n administrative agency may not create a criminal
offense or any liability not sanctioned by the lawmaking authority,
especially a liability for a tax or inspection fee.' See Commissioner of
Internal Revenue v. Acker, 361 U.S. 87, 4 L.Ed.2d 127, 80 S.Ct. 144
[1959,] and Independent Petroleum Corp. v. Fly, 141 F.2d 189 [5th Cir.
1944] as cited at 2 Am Jur 2d, p. 129, footnote 2 [1962 edition] [bold
emphasis added.] However, this cite from American Jurisprudence has been
removed from the 1994 edition of that legal encyclopedia.
9. The federal regulations create an income tax liability
for what specific classes of people?
Answer: The regulations at 26 CFR 1.1-1 attempted to
create a specific liability for all 'citizens of the United States' and
all 'residents of the United States.' However, those regulations
correspond to IRC section 1, which does not create a specific liability
for taxes imposed by subtitle A.
Therefore, these regulations are an overly broad
extension of the underlying statutory authority; as such, they are
unconstitutional, null and void ab initio [from the beginning, in Latin.]
The Acker case cited above held that federal regulations can not exceed
the underlying statutory authority. [See Answer to Question 8 above.]
10. How many classes of citizens are there, and how did
this number come to be?
Answer: There are two [2] classes of citizens: State
Citizens and federal citizens. The first class originates in the
Qualifications Clauses in the U.S. Constitution, where the term 'Citizen
of the United States' is used. [See 1:2:2, 1:3:3 and 2:1:5.] Notice the
UPPER-CASE 'C' in 'Citizen.'
The pertinent court cases have defined the term 'United
States' in these Clauses to mean 'States United,' and the full term means
'Citizen of ONE OF the States United.' See People v. De La Guerra, 40 Cal.
311, 337 [1870]; Judge Pablo De La Guerra signed the California
Constitution of 1849, when California first joined the Union. Similar
terms are found in the Diversity Clause at Article III, Section 2, Clause
1, and in the Privileges and Immunities Clause at Article IV, Section 2,
Clause 1. Prior to the Civil War, there was only one [1] class of Citizens
under American Law. See the holding in Pannill v. Roanoke, 252 F. 910,
914-915 [1918,] for definitive authority on this key point.
The second class originates in the 1866 Civil Rights Act,
where the term 'citizen of the United States' is used. This Act was later
codified at 42 U.S.C. 1983. Notice the lower-case 'c' in 'citizen.' The
pertinent court cases have held that Congress thereby created a municipal
franchise primarily for members of the Negro race, who were freed by
President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation [a war measure,] and later
by the Thirteenth Amendment banning slavery and involuntary servitude.
Compelling payment of a 'tax' for which there is no liability statute is
tantamount to involuntary servitude, and extortion.
Instead of using the unique term 'federal citizen,' as
found in Black's Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition, it is now clear that the
Radical Republicans who sponsored the 1866 Civil Rights Act were
attempting to confuse these two classes of citizens. Then, they attempted
to elevate this second class to constitutional status, by proposing a 14th
amendment to the U.S. Constitution. As we now know, that proposal was
never ratified. [See Answer to Question 6 above.]
Numerous court cases have struggled to clarify the
important differences between the two classes. One of the most definitive,
and dispositive cases, is Pannill v. Roanoke, 252 F. 910, 914-915 [1918,]
which clearly held that federal citizens had no standing to sue under the
Diversity Clause, because they were not even contemplated when Article III
in the U.S. Constitution was first being drafted, circa 1787 A.D.
Another is Ex parte Knowles, 5 Cal. 300 [1855] in which
the California Supreme Court ruled that there was no such thing as a
'citizen of the United States' [as of the year 1855 A.D..] Only federal
citizens have standing to invoke 42 U.S.C. 1983; whereas State Citizens do
not. See Wadleigh v. Newhall, 136 F. 941 [C.C. Cal. 1905.]
Many more cases can be cited to confirm the existence of
two classes of citizens under American Law. These cases are thoroughly
documented in the book entitled 'The Federal Zone: Cracking the Code of
Internal Revenue' by Paul Andrew Mitchell, B.A., M.S., now in its eleventh
edition. See also the pleadings in the case of USA v. Gilbertson, also in
the Supreme Law Library.
11. Can one be a State Citizen, without also being a
federal citizen?
Answer: Yes. The 1866 Civil Rights Act was municipal law,
confined to the District of Columbia and other limited areas where
Congress is the 'state' government with exclusive legislative jurisdiction
there. These areas are now identified as 'the federal zone.' [Think of it
as the blue field on the American flag; the stars on the flag are the 50
States.] As such, the 1866 Civil Rights Act had no effect whatsoever upon
the lawful status of State Citizens, then or now.
Several courts have already recognized our Right to be
State Citizens without also becoming federal citizens. For excellent
examples, see State v. Fowler, 41 La. Ann. 380, 6 S. 602 [1889] and
Gardina v. Board of Registrars, 160 Ala. 155, 48 S. 788, 791 [1909.] The
Maine Supreme Court also clarified the issue by explaining our 'Right of
Election' or 'freedom of choice,' namely, our freedom to choose between
two different forms of government. See 44 Maine 518 [1859,] Hathaway, J.
dissenting.
Since the Guarantee Clause does not require the federal
government to guarantee a Republican Form of Government to the federal
zone, Congress is free to create a different form of government there, and
so it has. In his dissenting opinion in Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U.S. 244 at
380 [1901,] Supreme Court Justice Harlan called it an absolute legislative
democracy.
But, State Citizens are under no legal obligation to join
or pledge any allegiance to that legislative democracy; their allegiance
is to one or more of the several States of the Union [i.e. the white stars
on the American flag, not the blue field.]
12. Who was Frank Brushaber, and why was his U.S. Supreme
Court case so important?
Answer: Frank Brushaber was the Plaintiff in the case of
Brushaber v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, 240 U.S. 1 [1916,] the first
U.S. Supreme Court case to consider the so-called 16th amendment.
Brushaber identified himself as a Citizen of New York State and a resident
of the Borough of Brooklyn, in the city of New York, and nobody challenged
that claim. The Union Pacific Railroad Company was a federal corporation
created by Act of Congress to build a railroad through Utah [from the
Union to the Pacific,] at a time when Utah was a federal Territory, i.e.
inside the federal zone. Brushaber's attorney committed an error by
arguing that the company had been chartered by the State of Utah, but Utah
was not a State of the Union when Congress first created that corporation.
Brushaber had purchased stock issued by the company. He then sued the
company to recover taxes that Congress had imposed upon the dividends paid
to its stockholders. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against Frank Brushaber,
and upheld the tax as a lawful excise, or indirect tax. The most
interesting result of the Court's ruling was a Treasury Decision ['T.D.']
that the U.S. Department of the Treasury later issued as a direct
consequence of the high Court's opinion. In T.D. 2313, the U.S. Treasury
Department expressly cited the Brushaber decision, and it identified Frank
Brushaber as a 'nonresident alien' and the Union Pacific Railroad Company
as a 'domestic corporation.' This Treasury Decision has never been
modified or repealed. T.D. 2313 is crucial evidence proving that the
income tax provisions of the IRC are municipal law, with no territorial
jurisdiction inside the 50 States of the Union. The U.S. Secretary of the
Treasury who approved T.D. 2313 had no authority to extend the holding in
the Brushaber case to anyone or anything not a proper Party to that court
action. Thus, there is no escaping the conclusion that Frank Brushaber was
the nonresident alien to which that Treasury Decision refers. Accordingly,
all State Citizens are nonresident aliens with respect to the municipal
jurisdiction of Congress, i.e. the federal zone.
13. What is a 'Withholding agent'?
Answer: [See Answer to Question 7 first.] The term
'Withholding agent' is legally defined at IRC section 7701[a][16.] It is
further defined by the statutes itemized in that section, e.g. IRC 1461
where liability for funds withheld is clearly assigned. In plain English,
a 'withholding agent' is a person who is responsible for withholding taxes
from a worker's paycheck, and then paying those taxes into the Treasury of
the United States, typically on a quarterly basis. See IRC section 7809.
One cannot become a withholding agent unless workers
first authorize taxes to be withheld from their paychecks. This
authorization is typically done when workers opt to execute a valid W-4
'Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate.' In plain English, by
signing a W- 4 workers designate themselves as 'employees' and certify
they are allowing withholding to occur.
If workers do not execute a valid W-4 form, a company's
payroll officer is not authorized to withhold any federal income taxes
from their paychecks. In other words, the payroll officer does not have
'permission' or 'power of attorney' to withhold taxes, until and unless
workers authorize or 'allow' that withholding - by signing Form W-4
knowingly, intentionally and voluntarily.
Pay particular attention to the term 'Employee' in the
title of this form. A properly executed Form W-4 creates the presumption
that the workers wish to be treated as if they were 'employees' of the
federal government. Obviously, for people who do not work for the federal
government, such a presumption is a legal fiction, at best.
14. What is a 'Withholding Exemption Certificate'?
Answer: A 'Withholding Exemption Certificate' is an
alternative to Form W-4, authorized by IRC section 3402[n] and executed in
lieu of Form W-4. Although section 3402[n] does authorize this
Certificate, the IRS has never added a corresponding form to its forms
catalog [see the IRS 'Printed Products Catalog'.]
In the absence of an official IRS form, workers can use
the language of section 3402[n] to create their own Certificates. In
simple language, the worker certifies that s/he had no federal income tax
liability last year, and anticipates no federal income tax liability
during the current calendar year. Because there are no liability statutes
for workers in the private sector, this certification is easy to justify.
Many public and private institutions have created their
own form for the Withholding Exemption Certificate, e.g. California
Franchise Tax Board, and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
This fact can be confirmed by using any search engine, e.g. google.com, to
locate occurrences of the term 'withholding exemption certificate' on the
Internet. This term occurs several times in IRC section 3402.
15. What is 'tax evasion' and who might be guilty of this
crime?
Answer: 'Tax evasion' is the crime of evading a lawful
tax. In the context of federal income taxes, this crime can only be
committed by persons who have a legal liability to pay, i.e. the
withholding agent. If one is not employed by the federal government, one
is not subject to the Public Salary Tax Act unless one chooses to be
treated 'as if' one is a federal government 'employee.' This is typically
done by executing a valid Form W-4.
However, as discussed above, Form W-4 is not mandatory
for workers who are not 'employed' by the federal government. Corporations
chartered by the 50 States of the Union are technically 'foreign'
corporations with respect to the IRC; they are decidedly not the federal
government, and should not be regarded 'as if' they are the federal
government, particularly when they were never created by any Act of
Congress.
Moreover, the Indiana Supreme Court has ruled that
Congress can only create a corporation in its capacity as the Legislature
for the federal zone. Such corporations are the only 'domestic'
corporations under the pertinent federal laws. This writer's essay
entitled 'A Cogent Summary of Federal Jurisdictions' clarifies this
important distinction between 'foreign' and 'domestic' corporations in
simple, straightforward language.
If Congress were authorized to create national
corporations, such a questionable authority would invade States' rights
reserved to them by the Tenth Amendment, namely, the right to charter
their own domestic corporations. The repeal of Prohibition left the Tenth
Amendment unqualified. See the Constantine case supra.
For purposes of the IRC, the term 'employer' refers only
to federal government agencies, and an 'employee' is a person who works
for such an 'employer.'
16. Why does IRS Form 1040 not require a Notary Public to
notarize a taxpayer's signature?
Answer: This question is one of the fastest ways to
unravel the fraudulent nature of federal income taxes. At 28 U.S.C.
section 1746, Congress authorized written verifications to be executed
under penalty of perjury without the need for a Notary Public, i.e. to
witness one's signature.
This statute identifies two different formats for such
written verifications: [1] those executed outside the 'United States' and
[2] those executed inside the 'United States.' These two formats
correspond to sections 1746[1] and 1746[2,] respectively.
What is extremely revealing in this statute is the format
for verifications executed 'outside the United States.' In this latter
format, the statute adds the qualifying phrase 'under the laws of the
United States of America.'
Clearly, the terms 'United States' and 'Unites States of
America' are both used in this same statute. They are not one and the
same. The former refers to the federal government - in the U.S.
Constitution and throughout most federal statutes. The latter refers to
the 50 States that are united by, and under, the U.S. Constitution. 28
U.S.C. 1746 is the only federal statute in all of Title 28 of the United
States Code that utilizes the term 'United States of America,' as such.
It is painfully if not immediately obvious, then, that
verifications made under penalty of perjury are outside the 50 States of
the Union [read 'the State zone'] if and when they are executed inside the
'United States' [read 'the federal zone'.]
Likewise, verifications made under penalty of perjury are
inside the 50 States of the Union, if and when they are executed outside
the 'United States.'
The format for signatures on Form 1040 is the one for
verifications made inside the United States [federal zone] and outside the
United States of America [State zone.]
17. Does the term 'United States' have multiple legal
meanings and, if so, what are they?
Answer: Yes. The term has several meanings. The term
'United States' may be used in any one of several senses. [1] It may be
merely the name of a sovereign occupying the position analogous to that of
other sovereigns in the family of nations. [2] It may designate the
territory over which the sovereignty of the United States extends, or [3]
it may be the collective name of the States which are united by and under
the Constitution. See Hooven & Allison Co. v. Evatt, 324 U.S. 652
[1945] [bold emphasis, brackets and numbers added for clarity.]
This is the very same definition that is found in Black's
Law Dictionary, Sixth Edition. The second of these three meanings refers
to the federal zone and to Congress only when it is legislating in its
municipal capacity. For example, Congress is legislating in its municipal
capacity whenever it creates a federal corporation, like the United States
Postal Service.
It is terribly revealing of the manifold frauds discussed
in these Answers, that the definition of 'United States' has now been
removed from the Seventh Edition of Black's Law Dictionary.
18. Is the term 'income' defined in the IRC and, if not,
where is it defined?
Answer: The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already
ruled that the term 'income' is not defined anywhere in the IRC: 'The
general term 'income' is not defined in the Internal Revenue Code.' U.S.
v. Ballard, 535 F.2d 400, 404 [8th Circuit, 1976.]
Moreover, in Mark Eisner v. Myrtle H. Macomber, 252 U.S.
189 [1920,] the high Court told Congress it could not legislate any
definition of 'income' because that term was believed to be in the U.S.
Constitution. The Eisner case was predicated on the ratification of the
16th amendment, which would have introduced the term 'income' into the
U.S. Constitution for the very first time [but only if that amendment had
been properly ratified.]
In Merchant's Loan & Trust Co. v. Smietanka, 255 U.S.
509 [1921,] the high Court defined 'income' to mean the profit or gain
derived from corporate activities. In that instance, the tax is a lawful
excise tax imposed upon the corporate privilege of limited liability, i.e.
the liabilities of a corporation do not reach its officers, employees,
directors or stockholders.
19. What is municipal law, and are the IRC's income tax
provisions municipal law, or not?
Answer: Yes. The IRC's income tax provisions are
municipal law. Municipal law is law that is enacted to govern the internal
affairs of a sovereign State; in legal circles, it is also known as
Private International Law. Under American Law, it has a much wider meaning
than the ordinances enacted by the governing body of a municipality, i.e.
city council or county board of supervisors. In fact, American legal
encyclopedias define 'municipal' to mean 'internal,' and for this reason
alone, the Internal Revenue Code is really a Municipal Revenue Code.
A mountain of additional evidence has now been assembled
and published in the book 'The Federal Zone' to prove that the IRC's
income tax provisions are municipal law.
One of the most famous pieces of evidence is a letter
from a Connecticut Congresswoman, summarizing the advice of legal experts
employed by the Congressional Research Service and the Legislative
Counsel. Their advice confirmed that the meaning of 'State' at IRC section
3121[e] is restricted to the named territories and possessions of D.C.,
Guam, Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and Puerto Rico.
In other words, the term 'State' in that statute, and in
all similar federal statutes, includes ONLY the places expressly named,
and no more.
20. What does it mean if my State is not mentioned in any
of the federal income tax statutes?
The general rule is that federal government powers must
be expressed and enumerated. For example, the U.S. Constitution is a grant
of enumerated powers. If a power is not enumerated in the U.S.
Constitution, then Congress does not have any authority to exercise that
power. This rule is tersely expressed in the Ninth Amendment, in the Bill
of Rights.
If California is not mentioned in any of the federal
income tax statutes, then those statutes have no force or effect within
that State. This is also true of all 50 States.
Strictly speaking, the omission or exclusion of anyone or
any thing from a federal statute can be used to infer that the omission or
exclusion was intentional by Congress. In Latin, this is tersely stated as
follows: Inclusio unius est exclusio alterius. In English, this phrase is
literally translated: Inclusion of one thing is the exclusion of all other
things [that are not mentioned.] This phrase can be found in any edition
of Black's Law Dictionary; it is a maxim of statutory construction.
The many different definitions of the term 'State' that
are found in federal laws are intentionally written to appear as if they
include the 50 States PLUS the other places mentioned. As the legal
experts in Congress have now confirmed, this is NOT the correct way to
interpret, or to construct, these statutes.
If a place is not mentioned, every American may correctly
infer that the omission of that place from a federal statute was an
intentional act of Congress. Whenever it wants to do so, Congress knows
how to define the term 'United States' to mean the 50 States of the Union.
See IRC section 4612[a][4][A.]
21. In what other ways is the IRC deliberately vague, and
what are the real implications for the average American?
There are numerous other ways in which the IRC is
deliberately vague. The absence of any legal definition for the term
'income' is a classic deception. The IRS enforces the Code as a tax on
everything that 'comes in,' but nothing could be further from the truth.
'Income' is decidedly NOT everything that 'comes in.'
More importantly, the fact that this vagueness is
deliberate is sufficient grounds for concluding that the entire Code is
null, void and unconstitutional, for violating our fundamental Right to
know the nature and cause of any accusation, as guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
Whether the vagueness is deliberate or not, any statute
is unconstitutionally void if it is vague. If a statute is void for
vagueness, the situation is the same as if it had never been enacted at
all, and for this reason it can be ignored entirely.
22. Has Title 26 of the United States Code ['U.S.C.']
ever been enacted into positive law, and what are the legal implications
if Title 26 has not been enacted into positive law?
Answer: No. Another, less obvious case of deliberate
deception is the statute at IRC section 7851[a][6][A,] where it states
that the provisions of subtitle F shall take effect on the day after the
date of enactment of 'this title.' Because the term 'this title' is not
defined anywhere in the IRC, least of all in the section dedicated to
definitions, one is forced to look elsewhere for its meaning, or to derive
its meaning from context.
Throughout Title 28 of the United States Code - the laws
which govern all the federal courts - the term 'this title' clearly refers
to Title 28. This fact would tend to support a conclusion that 'this
title,' as that term is used in the IRC, refers to Title 26 of the United
States Code. However, Title 26 has never been enacted into positive law,
as such.
Even though all federal judges may know the secret
meaning of 'this title,' they are men and women of UNcommon intelligence.
The U.S. Supreme Court's test for vagueness is violated whenever men and
women of common intelligence must necessarily guess at the meaning and
differ as to the application of a vague statute. See Connally et al. v.
General Construction Co., 269 U.S. 385, 391 [1926.] Thus, federal judges
are applying the wrong test for vagueness.
Accordingly, the provisions of subtitle F have never
taken effect. ['F' is for enForcement!] This subtitle contains all of the
enforcement statutes of the IRC, e.g. filing requirements, penalties for
failure to file and tax evasion, grants of court jurisdiction over liens,
levies and seizures, summons enforcement and so on.
In other words, the IRC is a big pile of Code without any
teeth; as such, it can impose no legal obligations upon anyone, not even
people with dentures!
23. What federal courts are authorized to prosecute
income tax crimes?
This question must be addressed in view of the Answer to
Question 22 above. Although it may appear that certain statutes in the IRC
grant original jurisdiction to federal district courts, to institute
prosecutions of income tax crimes, none of the statutes found in subtitle
F has ever taken effect. For this reason, those statutes do not authorize
the federal courts to do anything at all. As always, appearances can be
very deceiving. Remember the Wizard of Oz or the mad tea party of Alice in
Wonderland?
On the other hand, the federal criminal Code at Title 18,
U.S.C., does grant general authority to the District Courts of the United
States ['DCUS'] to prosecute violations of the statutes found in that
Code. See 18 U.S.C. 3231.
It is very important to appreciate the fact that these
courts are not the same as the United States District Courts ['USDC'.] The
DCUS are constitutional courts that originate in Article III of the U.S.
Constitution. The USDC are territorial tribunals, or legislative courts,
that originate in Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2 of the U.S.
Constitution, also known as the Territory Clause.
This author's OPENING BRIEF to the Eighth Circuit on
behalf of the Defendant in USA v. Gilbertson cites numerous court cases
that have already clarified the all important distinction between these
two classes of federal district courts. For example, in Balzac v. Porto
Rico, 258 U.S. 298 at 312 [1922,] the high Court held that the USDC
belongs in the federal Territories. This author's OPENING BRIEF to the
Ninth Circuit in Mitchell v. AOL Time Warner, Inc. et al. develops this
theme in even greater detail; begin reading at section '7[e.]'
The USDC, as such, appear to lack any lawful authorities
to prosecute income tax crimes. The USDC are legislative tribunals where
summary proceedings dominate.
For example, under the federal statute at 28 U.S.C. 1292,
the U.S. Courts of Appeal have no appellate jurisdiction to review
interlocutory orders issued by the USDC. Further details on this point are
available in the Press Release entitled 'Private Attorney General Cracks
Title 28 of the United States Code' and dated November 26, 2001 A.D.
24. Are federal judges required to pay income taxes on
their pay, and what are the real implications if they do pay taxes on
their pay?
Answer: No. Federal judges who are appointed to preside
on the District Courts of the United States - the Article III
constitutional courts - are immune from any taxation of their pay, by
constitutional mandate.
The fact that all federal judges are currently paying
taxes on their pay is proof of undue influence by the IRS, posing as a
duly authorized agency of the Executive Branch. See Evans v. Gore, 253
U.S. 245 [1920.]
Even if the IRS were a lawful bureau or department within
the U.S. Department of the Treasury [which they are NOT,] the existence of
undue influence by the Executive Branch would violate the fundamental
principle of Separation of Powers. This principle, in theory, keeps the 3
branches of the federal government confined to their respective areas, and
prevents any one branch from usurping the lawful powers that rightly
belong to the other two branches.
The Separation of Powers principle is succinctly defined
in Williams v. United States, 289 U.S. 553 [1933]; however, in that
decision the Supreme Court erred by defining 'Party' to mean only
Plaintiffs in Article III, contrary to the definition of 'Party' that is
found in Bouvier's Law Dictionary [1856.]
The federal judiciary, contemplated by the organic U.S.
Constitution, was intended to be independent and unbiased. These two
qualities are the essence, or sine qua non of judicial power, i.e. without
which there is nothing. Undue influence obviously violates these two
qualities. See Evans v. Gore supra.
In Lord v. Kelley, 240 F.Supp. 167, 169 [1965,] the
federal judge in that case was honest enough to admit, in his published
opinion, that federal judges routinely rule in favor of the IRS, because
they fear the retaliation that might result from ruling against the IRS.
There you have it, from the horse's mouth!
In front of a class of law students at the University of
Arizona in January of 1997, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist openly
admitted that all federal judges are currently paying taxes on their
judicial pay. This writer was an eyewitness to that statement by the Chief
Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court - the highest Court in the land.
Thus, all federal judges are now material witnesses to
the practice of concealing the Withholding Exemption Certificate from
them, when they were first hired as 'employees' of the federal judiciary.
As material witnesses, they are thereby disqualified from presiding on all
federal income tax cases.
25. Can federal grand juries issue valid indictments
against illegal tax protesters?
Answer: No. Federal grand juries cannot issue valid
indictments against illegal tax protesters. Protest has never been illegal
in America, because the First Amendment guarantees our fundamental Right
to express our objections to any government actions, in written and in
spoken words.
Strictly speaking, the term 'illegal' cannot modify the
noun 'protesters' because to do so would constitute a violation of the
First Amendment in the Bill of Rights, one of the most magnificent
constitutional provisions ever written.
Accordingly, for the term 'illegal tax protester' to
survive this obvious constitutional challenge, the term 'illegal' must
modify the noun 'tax.' An illegal tax protester is, therefore, someone who
is protesting an illegal tax. Such an act of protest is protected by the
First Amendment, and cannot be a crime.
Protest is also recognized and honored by the Uniform
Commercial Code; the phrases 'under protest' and 'without prejudice' are
sufficient to reserve all of one's fundamental Rights at law. See U.C.C.
1-207 [UCCA 1207 in California.]
By the way, the federal U.C.C. is also municipal law. See
the Answer to Question 19 above, and 77 Stat. 630, P.L. 88-243, December
30, 1963 [one month after President John F. Kennedy was murdered.]
26. Do IRS agents ever tamper with federal grand juries,
and how is this routinely done?
Answer: Yes. IRS agents routinely tamper with federal
grand juries, most often by misrepresenting themselves, under oath, as
lawful employees and 'Special Agents' of the federal government, and by
misrepresenting the provisions of subtitle F as having any legal force or
effect. Such false representations of fact violate Section 43 [a] of the
Lanham Act, uncodified at 15 U.S.C. 1125[a.] [Title 15 of the United
States Code has not been enacted into positive law either.]
They tamper with grand juries by acting as if 'income' is
everything that 'comes in,' when there is no such definition anywhere in
the IRC. Such false descriptions of fact also violate Section 43[a] of the
Lanham Act.
They tamper with grand juries by presenting documentary
evidence which they had no authority to acquire, in the first instance,
such as bank records. Bank signature cards do not constitute competent
waivers of their customers' fundamental Rights to privacy, as secured by
the Fourth Amendment. The high standard for waivers of fundamental Rights
was established by the U.S. Supreme Court in Brady v. U.S., 397 U.S. 742,
748 [1970.]
IRS agents tamper with grand juries by creating and
maintaining the false and fraudulent pretenses that the IRC is not vague,
or that the income tax provisions have any legal force or effect inside
the 50 States of the Union, when those provisions do not.
These are all forms of perjury, as well, and possibly
also misprision of perjury by omission, i.e. serious federal offenses.
Finally, there is ample evidence that IRS agents bribe
U.S. Attorneys, federal judges, and even the Office of the President with
huge kickbacks, every time a criminal indictment is issued by a federal
grand jury against an illegal tax protester. [See the Answer to Question
25 above.] These kick-backs range from $25,000 to $35,000 in CASH! They
also violate the Anti-Kickback Act of 1986, which penalizes the payment of
kickbacks from federal government subcontractors. See 41 U.S.C. 51 et seq.
As a trust domiciled in Puerto Rico, the IRS is, without
a doubt, a federal government subcontractor that is subject to this Act.
See 31 U.S.C. 1321[a][62.] The systematic and premeditated pattern of
racketeering by IRS employees also establishes probable cause to dismantle
the IRS permanently for violating the Sherman Antitrust Act, first enacted
in the year 1890 A.D. See 26 Stat. 209 [1890] [uncodified at 15 U.S.C. 1
et seq.]
27. What is 'The Kickback Racket,' and where can I find
evidence of its existence?
The evidence of this 'kickback racket' was first
discovered in a table of delegation orders, on a page within the Internal
Revenue Manual ['IRM'] - the internal policy and procedure manual for all
IRS employees.
Subsequently, this writer submitted a lawful request,
under the Freedom of Information Act, for a certified list of all payments
that had ever been made under color of these delegation orders in the IRM.
Mr. Mark L. Zolton, a tax law specialist within the Internal Revenue
Service, responded on IRS letterhead, transmitted via U.S. Mail, that few
records existed for these 'awards' because most of them were paid in cash!
When this evidence was properly presented to a federal
judge, who had been asked to enforce a federal grand jury subpoena against
a small business in Arizona, he ended up obstructing all 28 pieces of U.S.
Mail we had transmitted to that grand jury.
Obstruction of correspondence is a serious federal
offense, and federal judges have no authority whatsoever to intercept U.S.
Mail. See 18 U.S.C. 1702.
Obviously, the federal judge - John M. Roll - did NOT
want the grand jury in that case to know anything about these kickbacks.
They found out anyway, because of the manner in which this writer defended
that small business, as its Vice President for Legal Affairs.
28. Can the IRS levy bank accounts without a valid court
order?
Answer: No. The Fifth Amendment prohibits all
deprivations of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Due
Process of Law is another honored and well developed feature of American
constitutional practice. Put simply, it requires Notice and Hearing before
any property can be seized by any federal government employees, agents,
departments or agencies.
A levy against a bank account is a forced seizure of
property, i.e. the funds on deposit in that account. No such seizure can
occur unless due process of law has first run its course. This means
notice, hearing, and deliberate adjudication of all the pertinent issues
of law and fact.
Only after this process has run its proper or 'due'
course, can a valid court order be issued. The holding in U.S. v. O'Dell,
160 F.2d 304 [6th Cir. 1947,] makes it very clear that the IRS can only
levy a bank account after first obtaining a Warrant of Distraint, or court
ORDER. And, of course, no court ORDER could ever be obtained unless all
affected Parties had first enjoyed their 'day in court.'
29. Do federal income tax revenues pay for any government
services and, if so, which government services are funded by federal
income taxes?
Answer: No. The money trail is very difficult to follow,
in this instance, because the IRS is technically a trust with a domicile
in Puerto Rico. See 31 U.S.C. 1321[a][62.] As such, their records are
protected by laws which guarantee the privacy of trust records within that
territorial jurisdiction, provided that the trust is not also violating
the Sherman Antitrust Act.
They are technically not an 'agency' of the federal
government, as that term is defined in the Freedom of Information Act and
in the Administrative Procedures Act. The governments of the federal
territories are expressly excluded from the definition of 'agency' in
those Acts of Congress. See 5 U.S.C. 551[1][C.] [See also the Answer to
Question 5 above.]
All evidence indicates that they are a money laundry,
extortion racket, and conspiracy to engage in a pattern of racketeering
activity, in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951 and 1961 et seq.
They appear to be laundering huge sums of money into
foreign banks, mostly in Europe, and quite possibly into the Vatican. See
the national policy on money laundering at 31 U.S.C. 5341.
The final report of the Grace Commission, convened under
President Ronald Reagan, quietly admitted that none of the funds they
collect from federal income taxes goes to pay for any federal government
services. The Grace Commission found that those funds were being used to
pay for interest on the federal debt, and income transfer payments to
beneficiaries of entitlement programs like federal pension plans.
30. How can the Freedom of Information Act ['FOIA'] help
me to answer other key tax questions?
The availability of correct information about federal
government operations is fundamental to maintaining the freedom of the
American People. The Freedom of Information Act ['FOIA',] at 5 U.S.C. 552
et seq., was intended to make government documents available with a
minimal amount of effort by the People.
As long as a document is not protected by one of the
reasonable exemptions itemized in the FOIA, a requester need only submit a
brief letter to the agency having custody of the requested document[s.] If
the requested document is not produced within 10 working days [excluding
weekends and federal holidays,] the requester need only prepare a single
appeal letter.
If the requested document is not produced within another
20 working days after the date of the appeal letter, the requester is
automatically allowed to petition a District Court of the United States
[Article III DCUS, not the Article IV USDC] - to compel production of the
requested document, and judicially to enjoin the improper withholding of
same. See 5 U.S.C. 552[a][4][B.] The general rule is that statutes
conferring original jurisdiction on federal district courts must be
strictly construed.
This writer has pioneered the application of the FOIA to
request certified copies of statutes and regulations which should exist,
but do not exist. A typical request anyone can make, to which the U.S.
Treasury has now fallen totally silent, is for a certified copy of all
statutes which create a specific liability for taxes imposed by subtitle A
of the IRC. For example, see the FOIA request that this writer prepared
for author Lynne Meredith.
Of course, by now we already know the answer to this
question, before asking it. [Good lawyers always know the answers to their
questions, before asking them.]
It should also be clear that such a FOIA request should
not be directed to the IRS, because they are not an 'agency' as that term
is defined at 5 U.S.C. 551[1][C.] Address it instead to the Disclosure
Officer, Disclosure Services, Room 1054-MT, U.S. Department of the
Treasury, Washington 20220, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, USA. This is the format
for 'foreign' addresses, as explained in USPS Publication #221.
As James Madison once wrote, 'A popular government
without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a
Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy or perhaps both. Knowledge will forever
govern ignorance, and a people who mean to be their own Governors, must
arm themselves with the power knowledge gives.'
31. Where can I find more information, and still protect
my privacy?
There are many civic organizations throughout America who
have dedicated their precious time and energy to acquire and disseminate
widely these documented truths about the Internal Revenue Service and the
Internal Revenue Code.
The Internet's World Wide Web ['www'] is perhaps the best
single source of information [and disinformation] about the IRS, and the
major problems now confirmed in the IRC and in the mountains of related
policies, procedures, practices, customs, rules, regulations, forms and
schedules.
Learn to become a sophisticated consumer of information,
and the knowledge you seek will be yours to keep and share - with those
you love and endeavor to free from this terrible plague that persists in
America.
Good luck, and may God bless your earnest endeavors to
ensure the blessings of Liberty for ourselves and our Posterity, as stated
in the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution and in the Declaration of
Independence.
To order additional certified and embossed copies of this
document, please send $30.00 in cash or blank U.S. Postal Money Order to:
Dr. John C. Alden, M.D.
Attention: Forwarding Agent
501 W. Broadway, Suite 'A,' PMB #332
San Diego 92101
CALIFORNIA, USA
A 'blank' U.S. Postal Money Order leaves the 'PAY TO'
line blank, permitting us to negotiate it freely. You may, of course,
complete the other half; this allows you to obtain a photocopy of the
cancelled money order from the U.S. Postal Service without the need for a
court order.
Also, be sure to request information about our MOTIONS
FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION to freeze all IRS assets and to enjoin IRS from
depositing any tax collections into any account[s] other than the Treasury
of the United States. These MOTIONS were filed in two appeals at the Ninth
Circuit in San Francisco, using FRAP Rule 8 and the special procedures
available to a Private Attorney General under the RICO laws.
Finally, don't miss this opportunity to request more
information about our historic APPLICATION FOR ORDER DISSOLVING THE
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, under a specific authority granted to the
District Courts of the United States ['DCUS'] at 18 U.S.C. 1964[a.] Refer
to DCUS docket #SA CV 02-0382 GLT[ANx,] Santa Ana, California, or send a
blank email message to usintervention@yahoo.com. The vacation
autoresponder will respond with a list of Internet folders where several
court pleadings and related documents can be found.
VERIFICATION
As the Undersigned, I hereby verify, under penalty of
perjury, under the laws of the United States of America, without the
'United States' [federal government,] that the above statement of facts
and laws is true and correct, according to the best of My current
information, knowledge, and belief, so help Me God, pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
1746[1.] See the Supremacy Clause for Constitutional authority.