Anatomy of a Tax Protester

by Lucy Kalnes March 17 2007, 02:10

I. Introduction

To a certain extent, most everyone becomes a tax protestor of sorts come tax season.  The goal in filling out one's tax return is to ensure that one receives every penny back that can possibly be justified -- not that one pays the appropriate amount of tax given one's circumstances.  And yet, most of us do indeed pay.  Among those that do not pay in full can be found at least two distinct categories of shirkers: the tax evader, and the tax protestor.  The tax evader is content to freeride off of the compliance of the rest of society, choosing not to pay taxes but not without tacit reliance on a system that requires taxation.  The tax protestor, on the other hand, eschews taxation as a matter of course, proclaiming his distaste for this or any system of taxation by not taking part therein.  While the net effect for both the tax evader and the tax protester is the non-or-under-payment of tax, the tax protester feels doctrinally empowered where the tax evader just feels wily.  This article is concerned with the tax protester, and will examine first three broad categories into which arguments for the non-payment of the federal income tax fall, and then it will discuss a few different methods through which the tax protester achieves his ends.

II. Arguments

Common arguments against the payment of federal income tax fall into three categories: constitutional arguments, statutory arguments, and arguments alleging conspiracies to cover up the truth behind the constitutional and statutory arguments.  Constitutional arguments center around the 16th amendment which removed the requirement that taxes on certain income (from rents, dividends and other passive income derived from property) be apportioned among the state equally according to population.[1]  The arguments generally allege some deficiency in the ratification of the amendment: that the different states used different punctuation in their versions of the amendment[2], that Ohio had not yet been officially proclaimed a state at the time of the ratification[3], and many other arguments along these lines.[4]  Not surprisingly, none of the arguments have been accepted by any courts.

Other arguments focus instead on the statutes dealing with federal income taxation.  Filmmaker Aaron Russo, producer of "America: From Freedom to Fascism," has been quoted as saying that "Title 26 is not the law, it is I.R.S. regulations and to be a law it has to be passed by Congress."[5]  In the film, Russo claims that individuals who do pay tax have been tricked into so doing as no law imposes a tax liability -- notably, courts have interpreted the language of the word "impose" in the code to necessarily imply liability.[6]  A number of statutes expressly "impose" tax and the duty to file a return.[7] 

Some tax protesters go farther and would argue that in addition to defects that may exist in the statutes or constitutional underpinnings of the income tax, the government has been hard at work conspiring to cover up these defects.  Irwin Schiff, author of The Federal Mafia, offers on his website that Federal Judges have misrepresented income tax laws "so that the public [can't] figure out what they're doing."[8]  In the first chapter of his book, he emphasizes the "key role" that he feels federal courts have played in "hoodwink[ing]" the American public, aided by both the federal government generally and an "army" of accountants, lawyers and other tax preparers.[9]

III. The Means

Understanding the "why" behind the tax protester is only part of understanding how a tax protester operates.  The other aspect worth overviewing here is the means through which a tax protestors attempts to avoid tax.  A recent high-profile tax evader (and possible protestor), Wesley Snipes, employed a "defense" popular to tax protesters: the section 861 defense.[10]  Under an erroneous interpretation of this section, the taxpayer argues that only income earned from foreign sources constitutes taxable income and fails to report domestically earned wages.[11]  Section 861 is cited among the IRS' "Dirty Dozen" of tax evasion schemes, including such other classics as frivolous Constitutional arguments akin to that outlined in the first section of this article, offshore transactions, flat out fraud and abuse of a variety of different trust entities and corporation, both charitable and otherwise.[12]  Others, like the incarcerated Mr. Irwin Schiff, opt not to file a return at all (as, in the eyes of Mr. Schiff, there is no obligation to file a return) -- or to file a return replete with zeroes accompanied by a "confession" detailing why.[13]

 IV. Conclusion

April 17 is tomorrow, and marks the due date for filing your 2006 tax return.  The author wholeheartedly recommends that if you haven't yet done so, grab your 1040EZ, A, or whatever flavor you choose and get out the tax -- but if you decide not to, go out with a bang like Mr. Irwin Schiff.  Unlike the tax evader, the tax protester has a backbone and a vision, and it's difficult not to respect that.

 

[1] See U.S. Const. amend. XVI, see also FindLaw.com, The Sixteenth Amendment, at http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment16/01.ntml#2; Wikipedia, Entry on Tax Protester Arguments, at www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_protester_arguments.

[2]  See, e.g., U.S. v. Thomas, 788 F.2d 1250 (7th Cir. 1986), cert. denied, 107 S.Ct. 187 (1986).

[3]  See Wikipedia, Entry on Tax Protestor Arguments, at www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_protester_arguments.

[4]  See generally The Law That Never Was, at www.thelawthatneverwas.com (last visited April 16, 2007).

[5]  David Cay Johnston, Facts Refute Filmmaker's Assertions on Taxes, The N.Y. Times, July 31, 2006.

[6] Id.

[7]  See 26 U.S.C.A. §§1, 11, 6151 (West 2007).

[8]  Irwin Schiff, The Pay No Income Tax Website Home Page, at www.paynoincometax.com (last visited April 16, 2007).

[9]  Irwin Schiff, The Federal Mafia, Chapter 1, available at www.paynoincometax.com/chapter1.htm.

[10]  Rond Drew, Celebrity Tax Evasion: What Did Wesley Snipes Do and What Happens Now?, Associated Content, October 20, 2006, available at www.associatedcontent.com/article/75782/celebrity_tax_evasion_what_did_wesley.html.

[11]  Id.

[12]  See The Internal Revenue Service Website, IRS Announces the 2005 Dirty Dozen, Feb. 28, 2005, at www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=136337,00.html.

[13] See supra note 8.

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