In a remarkable admission that is likely to rock the Internal Revenue
Service again, testimony released Thursday by House Ways and Means
Committee Chairman Dave Camp
reveals that an agent involved in reviewing tax exempt applications
from conservative groups told a committee investigator that the agency
is still targeting Tea Party groups, three months after the IRS scandal
erupted..
In closed door testimony before the House Ways & Means Committee,
the unidentified IRS agent said requests for special tax status from
Tea Party groups is being forced into a special "secondary screening"
because the agency has yet to come up with new guidance on how to judge
the tax status of the groups.
In a transcript from the committee provided to Secrets, a Ways &
Means investigator asked: "If you saw -- I am asking this currently, if
today if a Tea Party case, a group -- a case from a Tea Party group came
in to your desk, you reviewed the file and there was no evidence of
political activity, would you potentially approve that case? Is that
something you would do?"
The agent said, "At this point I would send it to secondary screening, political advocacy."
The committee staffer then said, "So you would treat a Tea Party
group as a political advocacy case even if there was no evidence of
political activity on the application. Is that right?" The agent
admitted, "Based on my current manager's direction, uh-huh."
Camp called the renewed targeting of Tea Party groups "outrageous."
Added a committee aide, "In plain English, the IRS is still targeting Tea Party cases."
During 2010-2012 period when the anti-Obama Tea Party groups faced
special scrutiny from the president's IRS, agents used a "be on the
lookout," or BOLO, list which said groups with words like "Tea Party" in
their title should face special, secondary screening for political
activities that might hamper their special tax status.
When the scandal erupted after a Treasury Department inspector
general revealed the improper political scrutiny, the acting head of the
IRS, Danny Werfel, said the BOLO list had been suspended. That was six weeks ago.
But because there is nothing in its place, agents apparently either
don't know how to handle Tea Party tax exempt applications, or are too
scared to make a decision.
Asked by the committee how it handles Tea Party applications, the
agent said, "If a political advocacy case came in today, I would give it
-- or talk about it to my manager because right now we really don't
have any direction or we haven't had any for the last month and a half."
Camp, the Michigan Republican, said, "It is outrageous that
IRS management continues to target Tea Party cases without any
justification. The harassment, abuse and delays these Americans have
faced over the last few years has been unwarranted, unprovoked and, at
times, possibly illegal. The fact that the IRS still continues to treat
the Tea Party differently and subject them to additional targeting is
outrageous and it must stop immediately."
-----
Ways & Means Committee transcript of the IRS official.
Wednesday, August 1, 2013
Committee: Today, currently, how do you analyze advocacy cases. If,
for example, Tea Party of Arkansas came in today, how would you handle
it?
IRS agent: Well, the BOLO list doesn't exist anymore.
Committee: Sure.
IRS agent: If a political advocacy case came in today, I would give it --
or talk about it to my manager because right now we really don't have
any direction or we haven't had any for the last month and a half.
Committee: If you saw -- I am asking this currently, if today if a
Tea Party case, a group -- a case from a Tea Party group came in to your
desk, you reviewed the file and there was no evidence of political
activity, would you potentially approve that case? Is that something you
would do?
IRS agent: At this point I would send it to secondary screening, political advocacy.
Committee: So you would treat a Tea Party group as a political
advocacy case even if there was no evidence of political activity on the
application. Is that right?
IRS agent: Based on my current manager's direction, uh-huh.
-----
Obama basically gave the IRS a green light to continue singling out conservatives when he called it a “phony scandal.”
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