from the Tax Lawyer's Blog
Geithner Penalty Waiver Act of 2009
December 2nd, 2009 ·
From the
TaxProf, Paul Caron:
Congressmen John Carter (R-TX) and Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA) yesterday
introduced the Geithner Penalty Waiver Act, requiring that the IRS assess the
same penalty against U.S. taxpayers that came forward in the UBS tax fraud
investigation as paid by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner for failing to pay
taxes on his IMF income — zero.
The preamble to Congressman Carter’s press release states,
[T]he Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
mandates equal penalties for similar offenses, and that the failure of the IRS
to assess any penalties against Geithner demands similar penalties for all
taxpayers with substantially equivalent cases.
And this is from Carter,
This bill seeks to codify what is now established by the law of precedent.
The Geithner case has established a legal precedent for the determination of
penalties by the IRS, and that precedent can be cited in all federal tax courts.
The penalty is now set at zero.
Taxpayers who willfully attempt to evade paying their fair taxes should pay a
penalty, or our tax code becomes unenforceable. This bill is not to reward tax
evaders, but to defend the Rule of Law itself. If we as a nation choose not to
enforce the law against the politically privileged, then we cannot enforce the
law against others without undermining respect for the law itself.
This is similar to the Rangel Rule Act that was introduced by Carter in
September.
Without knowing more about why Charlie Rangel and Tim Geithner’s penalties were
abated it is difficult to tell whether they have received special treatment from
the IRS.
Here is what I would like to know:
1. Did the IRS assess the penalty first and then later, upon request, abate that
penalty?
2. Did Rangel and Geithner file a written request for the abatement of penalties
on reasonable cause grounds?
3. If so, what was that reasonable cause?
As a general rule, the IRS assesses accuracy-related penalties against taxpayers
with tax deficiencies and considers abatement of the those penalties only after
a written request is made showing that the underpayment of tax was due to
reasonable cause and not willful neglect.
Consequently, if the IRS did not assess an accuracy-related penalty in the first
instance, I think a good argument can be made that Rangel and Geithner did, in
fact, receive special treatment.
If the IRS did assess the penalties and later granted Rangel’s and Geithner’s
requests for abatement, we would have to know what “reasonable cause” arguments
were made in order to determine whether the IRS treated those arguments in a
manner similar to those of similarly situated taxpayers who lacked their
political clout.
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I have been scrupulously honest on my tax returns for my entire life. I have done that because (one) that's the way my parents raised me, (two) I've found that it's simpler in the long run to just be honest rather than to maintain a web of fabrications, and (three) like everyone else, I worry about being audited.
I am greatly disturbed by the number of tax-cheats, felons, radicals, corrupt scumbags and assorted assholes occupying high positions in the current administration. I am too old and disabled to take direct action against these people as I would like to do, but I can refuse to finance their destruction of America by failing to pay the bulk of my 2009 taxes. I will be donating that money next year to conservative election campaigns where it may be needed, or to right-wing militias, if we've reached that point.
What are they going to do, fine me, put me in jail? If they put me in jail they'll have to provide food and medicine and health care. If they want to fine me, they'll have to do it soon. I did without stuff all my life so I could put money into 401(k)s and IRAs. In the last few years they've lost more than half their value, and the dollar has also lost value. The finance gurus say we're heading for hyper-inflation. My life-savings won't buy a freaking "happy meal" in a few years. I could have bought a new luxury car every year and wound up at the same place I'm at now. Bad life choices.