Posted on 05/17/2013 5:43:59 AM PDT by SMARTY
IRS Rationale for Tea Party Scandal Is Debunked by Data By Doug Donovan
Applications for tax exemption from advocacy nonprofits had not yet spiked when the Internal Revenue Service began using what it admits was inappropriate scrutiny of conservative groups in 2010.
In fact, applications were declining, data show.
Top IRS officials have been saying that a significant increase in applications from advocacy groups seeking tax-exempt status spurred its Cincinnati office in 2010 to filter those requests by using such politically loaded phrases as Tea Party, patriots, and 9/12.
Both Steven Miller, the agencys acting commissioner until he stepped down Wednesday, and Lois Lerner, director of the agencys exempt-organization division, have said over the past week that IRS officials started the scrutiny after observing a surge in applications for status as 501(c)(4) social welfare groups. Both officials cited an increase from about 1,500 applications in 2010 and to nearly 3,500 in 2012. President Obama ask Mr. Miller to resign on Wednesday.
The scrutiny began, however, in March 2010, before an uptick could have been observed, according to data contained in the audit released Tuesday from the Treasury Departments inspector general for tax administration.
The number of 501(c)(4) applications for all of 2010 was actually less than in 2009.
Related Content Inside the IRS Tea Party Scandal Groups Could Have Sued IRS Over Delays IRS Tea Party Scandal Could Cause Charity Fallout Opinion: Scandal Should Prompt IRS to Clarify Rules It doesnt bear out the statement that there was a surge in 2010, said Bruce Hopkins, a tax attorney specializing in nonprofits. Thats inconsistent with what Lois said last week.
'Inappropriate Criteria The audit says the IRS began to use inappropriate criteria to single out applications in March 2010. By April 2010, a sensitive case report was issued on Tea Party cases, indicating that managers in Cincinnati were aware of the sensitive nature of the reviews.
According to the audit, 1,735 groups applied for 501(c)(4) exemption for the federal fiscal year that ended September 30, 2010six months after the IRS began its scrutiny. That was down slightly from 1,751 the prior year.
The number grew to 2,265 during the fiscal year that ended September 30, 2011, and to 3,357 in 2012. By then the criteria the IRS was using to flag groups had changed three times to include searches for groups with names that contained Bill of Rights, educating on the constitution, and limiting/expanding government.
Mr. Miller wrote in USA Today on Monday that the IRS began to centralize those applications in 2010 because the division that supervises tax-exempt organizations observed a sharp increase in the number of applications from groups potentially engaged in political campaign intervention that were seeking either 501(c)(4) status or designation as a 501(c)(3) charity. He then cites the increase between 2010 and 2012.
The audit shows that 501(c)(3) applications also declined in both 2010 and 2011 from the previous years.
Official Response Ms. Lerner offered the same explanation for why the applications were being heavily scrutinized when she publicly apologized for the procedures during an American Bar Association conference last week in Washington.
Between 2010 and 2012, we started seeing a very big uptick in the number of 501(c)(4) applications we were receiving, she said. It more than doubled.
IRS officials did not return requests for comment about the discrepancy in how they accounted for their actions. Since her comments, both Democrats and Republicans have condemned the procedures. The House Ways and Means Committee is scheduled to question Mr. Miller at a hearing on Friday, and the Justice Department is conducting an investigation of the agency for any possible criminal actions related to these cases.
In the IRSs official response to the inspector generals audit findings also cites that surge when explaining why agents needed to centralize these applications.
The letter, written by Joseph Grant, acting commissioner for tax-exempt and government entities at the IRS, said the agencys review was also motivated by numerous referrals from the public, media, watchdog groups, and members of Congress alleging that specific section-501(c)(4) organizations were engaged in political campaign activity to an impermissible extent.
Paul Streckfus, publisher of EO Tax Journal and a former IRS employee who reviewed tax-exemption applications, said he believes that pressure from those referrals caused the IRS to start using the criteria that have gotten it in trouble.
It wasnt so much the number of applications but the complexity, Mr. Streckfus said.
Typical applications from advocacy groups submitted before 2010 had never involved such a massive grass-roots political network like the Tea Party, which advocates for smaller government, he says.
The initial problem wasnt that there was so many but that there wasnt any guidance on how to deal with these cases, he said.
Seeking Neutrality David French, senior counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, which represents 27 Tea Party groups that were singled out, said the IRS is clearly on record as citing the increase as a reason for its scrutiny.
In fact, the number of 501(c)(4) applications dropped between 2009 and 2010, when the IRS began its unconstitutional targeting. Thats plain from the IG report, Mr. French said. Even if applications did increaseas they eventually didthe solution is to create viewpoint neutral, constitutionally appropriate criteria for evaluation, not to implement ideological screening.
Says Mr. Streckfus: IRS officials have a lot to answer for.
Suzanne Perry contributed to this article.
IS the MSM THAT committed to the Obama administration.
How rich is it, that the first black president and first black attorney general preside over institutionalized civil rights voilations.
The power to tax is the power to destroy.
Its time to consign the IRS to the history section.
Right now, with the right person leading the charge, ONLY the Tea Party has the ability to take on the ruling elite in BOTH parties and win.
It has to be brought back into the prominence it had prior to the 2010 elections and then put on steroids to quadruple its effectiveness.
I know some here hate Glenn Beck but even the haters would have to admit he put the Tea Party on steroids with his show on FOX.
There must be someone in 300+ million people who can organize such large rallies of PEACEFUL protesters who leave an area as clean as when they entered it, as Glenn Beck did. The protesters at his rallies and other Tea Party rallies had class which cannot be found on the left and unfortunately in some areas of the right.
It took a Tea Party to start this country and it would seem only a Tea Party might save it from the huge infestation of communists in public schools, universities, journalism, lawyers, media...
A lot of new techniques would have to be pursued in challenging a DNC nominee, but the next Presidential election COULD be problematic for Liberals.
Conservatives need to consolidate all the gains that have been made since “O” began cutting this malicious and ruinous swath through American society and the American economy.
It will be a challenge because we need leadership which is not hide bound to the OLD way of doing things.
A lot of new techniques would have to be pursued in challenging a DNC nominee, but the next Presidential election COULD be problematic for Liberals.
Conservatives need to consolidate all the gains that have been made since “O” began cutting this malicious and ruinous swath through American society and the American economy.
It will be a challenge because we need leadership which is not hide bound to the OLD way of doing things.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.