Interim House Report on IRS Scandal Finds a Smidgeon of CorruptionAn interim report from the ongoing House investigation by two committees says IRS senior officials mistreated and targeted conservative groups applying for tax-exempt status up to the presidential election of 2012. They have so far found no direct link to the White House.
While they don’t say this in the report, it is unlikely the heads of the IRS acted on their own without any encouragement from their bosses in the White House.
The report does indicate that the agency took cues from Obama’s criticism of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling: “The rhetoric led the IRS to hold a deeply skeptical view of the merits of applications filed by new conservative groups…Evidence shows an IRS responsive to the partisan policy objectives of the White House and an IRS leadership that coordinates with political appointees of the Obama administration.”
The report, according to The Hill, asserts that the bias proves that the IRS is no longer a neutral tax collector.
Also not mentioned is the lie told by Treasury Secretary Jack Lew who said he first heard about the audit in the news, May 2013, but then admitted it was mid-March 2013 when the Inspector General, J. Russell George, spoke with him. Mr. Lew said he only knew the details May 10th. He did not mention it to Barack Obama according to Lew.
The report says that conservative groups were given improper scrutiny from 2010-2012.
Eight IRS officials were named as having the power to stop the targeting but they didn’t. It included Commissioner Douglas Shulman, Acting Commissioner Steven Miller, and the infamous Lois Lerner, head of the tax-exempt bureau.
The report states that Lerner played a significant role:
Documents show that Lerner played a significant role in the targeting. In the Fall 2010, in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, Lerner spoke of the pressure on the IRS to “fix the problem” of political speech by nonprofit groups. In an e-mail to IRS colleagues, she said she wanted to initiate a “c4 project,” and warned her colleagues, “we need to be cautious so it isn’t a per se political project.” In February 2011, Lerner ordered two Tea Party “test” cases, to be scrutinized by IRS official in Washington, D.C., including putting them through a “multi-tier” review and calling them “very dangerous.”
On May 10, 2013, Lerner broke the news of an upcoming Inspector General report and attempted to downplay the misconduct by publicly apologizing for the IRS targeting through a planted question at an obscure Friday morning tax-law panel.
The report states: “Though Miller was never asked as directly as [Commissioner Doug] Shulman about the targeting … Miller likewise never told Congress about the IRS misconduct. Miller’s multiple missed opportunities to tell Congress about the targeting continued the IRS’s pattern of failing to inform Congress.” http://www.independentsentinel.com/house-interim-report-on-irs-scandal-the-irs-is-no-longer-a-neutral-tax-collector/