Posted on 01/05/2004 9:19:57 PM PST by TIElniff
Tax protesters plan to attend Bedford man's retrial By Toni Heinzl Star-Telegram Staff Writer FORT WORTH - For tax protesters across the country, Bedford businessman Richard Simkanin has become a hero and martyr for taking a stance against federal income taxes and rejecting the authority of the federal courts.
Simkanin has been jailed since June while awaiting trial on tax charges. He accepted a plea bargain that was later thrown out because of a technical error, saw his first trial end in a mistrial and will face a retrial Monday.
The 59-year-old owner of a small plastics-manufacturing company is "an American patriot persecuted by a tyrannical government," his supporters say.
In a show of solidarity, many of the protesters have vowed to come to the federal courthouse in Fort Worth on Monday for Simkanin's retrial.
They have posted a billboard message just a few blocks from the federal courthouse to send a message to U.S. District Judge John McBryde, the trial judge.
In large letters, the billboard proclaims: "USDC Judge McBryde. OBEY THE CONSTITUTION. FREE Dick Simkanin NOW!"
It gives the We The People organization's Web site address, www.givemeliberty.org., and features a head shot photograph of Simkanin's behind superimposed prison bars, with the caption, "Innocent until proven guilty."
McBryde has not been impressed by arguments made by Simkanin and other tax protesters. He compared the "tax honesty movement" to a cult, according to a scathing order issued July 14 in which McBryde stated his reasons for keeping Simkanin behind bars pending trial.
"He, and those who share his views, have a cult-like belief that laws that are generally accepted by citizens of the United States are not applicable to them," McBryde wrote. "Certain of them have joined Simkanin in publicly announcing that they are not complying with the internal revenue laws of the United States."
A vow to ignore laws
Until a few years ago, Simkanin was the little-known owner of Arrow Custom Plastics in Bedford.
But his life in obscurity ended in March 2001 when he took out a full-page ad in `USA Today' with a group of like-minded citizens who announced their opposition to federal income taxes.
Last summer, he was charged by federal authorities with failing to withhold taxes from his employees' paychecks and with filing fraudulent claims for tax refunds.
McBryde ordered Simkanin held in jail after an informant told authorities that Simkanin had threatened to kill federal judges. Simkanin also testified before McBryde that he did not believe that the federal courts had any jurisdiction over him.
On his Web site, a warning was published that spoke of the "fury of a fire" that would consume his adversaries. He once wrote to the treasury secretary that he had repatriated himself from the United States to the "Republic of Texas" and vowed to ignore the laws of the United States.
Prosecutors argued that a man with such views could not be trusted to obey bail conditions set by a federal judge.
Simkanin and other followers of the tax honesty movement believe that the vast majority of U.S. citizens working for U.S. companies are not required to pay federal income taxes under the Constitution or any current law.
They accuse the government, and particularly the Internal Revenue Service, of taking trillions of hard-earned dollars from average citizens in an unprecedented scam. The IRS and the Justice Department maintain that the arguments of the tax honesty advocates are bogus and popular ploys in a string of illegal tax evasion scams promoted by a few self-styled tax experts.
The fact that Simkanin's first trial ended in a mistrial in November because of a hung jury has galvanized this movement.
Debunking
common myths
Simkanin has won supporters in tax protester circles across the nation.
One of them, Ken Evans of Wilmington, Del., a salesman for a pharmaceutical company, said in a telephone interview that he instructed his employer two years ago to stop withholding federal income taxes from his paychecks. He said that he has not faced any administrative action from the IRS, but that a federal judge dismissed his civil lawsuit against the government in which Evans sought to force the IRS to explain his tax liability to him.
"The lawsuit against Mr. Simkanin is nothing more than a propaganda lawsuit by the government," Evans said. "I'm very confident that the government will lose this one because Mr. Simkanin is correct that the law does not require the majority of businesses in this nation to withhold for people who work for them."
Another tax honesty advocate, self-employed database manager Mark Yannone, of Phoenix, said in telephone and email interviews that he admired Simkanin's courage to take on the government, adding that he believes that millions of people share his views but are afraid to take action.
"More than 50 percent of American adults receive some kind of federal checks, including Social Security," Yannone said. "If they speak out against the government, they're cutting their own throats."
Phil Beasley, a spokesman for the IRS in Dallas, said the agency would not make any officials available to discuss Simkanin's case until the conclusion of his trial because it would be improper to comment on pending litigation. Instead, Beasley referred to IRS publications and Web site postings aimed at debunking common myths spread by the tax protesters.
In essence, the IRS response says that the constitutionality of the federal income taxes has been upheld by numerous court decisions and that the tax protesters deliberately misinterpret tax laws to advance their agenda.
"Some people find themselves irresistibly drawn to the anti-tax movement's illusory claim that there is no legal requirement to pay federal income tax," IRS Special Agent Mike Lacenski said in a statement Sept. 30 -- after Simkanin pleaded guilty to failing to collect and pay taxes on his employees' wages.
"The Courts have repeatedly rejected those arguments as frivolous," Lacenski said.
Seeking an
accountant ally
In a bizarre twist in this high-profile tax case, Simkanin's Sept. 30 plea agreement, negotiated by government and defense attorneys and approved by McBryde, contained a mistake regarding the potential maximum sentence.
The original plea agreement misstated the potential maximum sentence under the law as being three years when it should have said five years. When Simkanin refused to sign off on another plea offer with a potential maximum sentence of five years, McBryde threw out the agreement and allowed Simkanin to take his case to trial before a jury.
In court filings, Assistant U.S. Attorney David Jarvis has indicated that the government will seek to use additional evidence at the retrial to buttress its contention that Simkanin deliberately broke tax laws and that he had a documented history of rejecting federal and state jurisdiction.
Under a unique feature of criminal tax cases, jurors must decide whether a defendant unintentionally violated the law after trusting wrong advice in good faith. Ignorance of the law, in such cases, is a legal defense.
Prosecutors argued at the first trial, and again in court filings for the retrial, that Simkanin intentionally decided to shirk his tax obligations.
During the first trial, Simkanin's former accountant, Fred Taylor, testified that his firm stopped representing Simkanin when Simkanin refused Taylor's advice to continue withholding and paying taxes on employees' wages.
Taylor, an accountant with more than 25 years of experience, said he told Simkanin that it would be unlawful to drop out of the tax system.
Jarvis said that Simkanin searched for an accountant who shared his views about income taxes and found an ally in accountant Wayne Paul.
Defense attorney Arch McColl of Dallas said that Simkanin trusted Paul's advice.
"Mr. Paul advised my client he did not have a requirement to withhold because of the particular business he was in," McColl said after the first trial.
McColl did not return several messages left at his office during the past two weeks.
For the retrial, McColl's list of defense witnesses includes a California lawyer and tax honesty advocate, Eduardo Rivera, who is highly regarded in tax protester circles.
Rivera made headlines last April when the Justice Department filed suit in federal court in Los Angeles to stop him from promoting three major tax scams.
The lawsuit, filed April 10, accuses Rivera of selling opinion letters falsely stating that his customers are not liable for federal income taxes and of selling an "asset protection" service that he claims can shield his customers' assets from IRS levies. Justice Department attorneys also said in court documents that Rivera represents his customers before the IRS for the purpose of determining that they are not liable for all federal taxes.
According to court papers, Rivera argues that only federal employees have to pay federal income taxes. The IRS claims that six of Rivera's customers owe more than $9.5 million in taxes, interest and penalties.
"Tax scammers enrich themselves by helping others violate the law," Eileen O'Connor, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's tax division, said in a statement after the lawsuit against Rivera. "The Justice Department will shut down abuses of the public trust by people who promote tax scams, including those run by licensed professionals."
In a telephone interview last week, Rivera, of Torrance, Calif., said he could not comment on Simkanin's case because he might be called as an expert witness for the defense.
He agreed, however, to email to the `Star-Telegram an advice letter he sends out to friends and clients in which he rejects the authority and legitimacy of the federal courts.
"Any litigant in any United States district court in any state of the Union is warned that these courts have no judicial power whatsoever," Rivera wrote.
He advises his tax clients against making voluntary appearances at a federal courthouse: "Your voluntary appearance at courthouse will be interpreted as a consent to territorial jurisdiction of that court, so, any appearance or acquiescence with a demand or request will constitute acceptance of jurisdiction."
ONLINE: IRS Nonfiler Enforcement Program, www.treas.gov/irs/ci/tax--fraud/docnonfilers.htm .
We the People, www.givemeliberty.org .
Toni Heinzl, (817) 390-7684
theinzl@star-telegram.com
The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states, and without regard to any census or enumeration.
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