http://www.losthorizons.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=733Hi Everyone,
First post, but an avid reader. So I thought I would provide a little back ground.
I am an airline pilot and flew years ago with Vernie Kuglin; my adventure into this arena was as a non-filer. In that venue, I sued the US under 7433 in May 2006. During the fall of 2006, I was first exposed to CTC and became convinced that Pete was right, so I collected all my data and filed CTC returns getting most of the same responses many others are getting.
I would like to observe that I believe that the main reason the IRS rejects our returns as "frivolous" has nothing to do with the definition of "frivolous" but rather some defect in our return. Either a math error or an omission or some small defect that any other return would receive the "math error notice" or audit, or some other method of correcting the inconsistency. In our case, the IRS (from a tactical perspective) has no down side to simply declaring them "frivolous" because it is almost impossible to deal with and allows them to continue all other enforcement actions.
In March of 2007 my case was dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. I filed a motion for reconsideration based upon a Supreme Court case from Jan 2008 that found the exhaustion was a positive defense for the jury. In March 2008, the judge (Reggie Walton -- Scooter Libby's judge) REINSTATED my case in a minute order refering mostly to his Memorandum Opinion which has yet to be published.
Interestingly (although painful) the IRS elected to seize my assets and garnish my wages within one week of receiving my original summons in May or Jun of 2006. Eventually they were required to return what they stole. Now, when the IRS learned that the case had been reinstated, they contacted a DOJ attorney (but not the one assigned to my case) who instructed them to "proceed with enforcement actions." Apparently they don't like being challenged in court and immediately respond by trying to take any funds you might have to fight with. So the company I work for has started levying funds again, and nothing is safe in any of my bank accounts.
I have been toying with the idea of filing a motion to show cause and then a request to sanction them as a result of their history of seizing assets when the case turns against them. My problem right now is that I am preparing to go to trial as one of the few folks ever to sucessfully challenge the IRS on this issue and I can't find any attorneys willing to take the case. I have talked to most of the big ones, Cryer, Dickstein, Bancroft, etc either personally or through close contacts, and am really getting frustrated.
Additionally, I think the case is at a point that it might be possible to get a mandamus motion considered on the CTC filed returns, but I am unwilling to do it unless I have someone helping who knows exactly what the issue is and how to properly file for it, because I am not willing to see the case evaporate because of some administrative or procedural issue.
So, I am making an appeal to any of you who might be attorneys to consider looking at my case and evaluating if the entire cause can be advanced by pursuing this case. I survived 12b6 and exhaustion and I think this could go to trial, and I aim to win.
Thanks in advanced,
Bob
(bolding added).
See:
Robert J. Welzel & Lisa L. Welzel v. United States Government
case no. 1:06-cv-00838-RBW
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
And:
Robert J. Welzel & Lisa L. Welzel v. United States
case no. 1:06-cv-01580-RBW
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
(This case -- brought by taxpayers under 26 USC 7431 and 7433 -- was dismissed with prejudice.)
EDIT: Corrected middle initial on name of Lisa Welzel. Also, both cases apparently brought under section 7433.