The Gillespie crew filed a 2009 Form 1040X amended return using Hendrickson's Cracking the Code tax scam. Their original return apparently showed over $80,000 of income; the amended return is (of course) based on the Hendrickson theory that the income isn't taxable. They claimed a refund of $13,653 on the Form 1040X.
The problem is that the Internal Revenue Service treated the Form 1040X as not being a valid return -- for obvious reasons.
So, the Gillespie family filed a lawsuit, Gillespie v. Internal Revenue Service, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, case no. 15-cv-00434-LA, to recover the refund.
The problem is that if the Form 1040X is not a valid federal income tax return, it cannot be a valid administrative claim for tax refund, either. And, if it's not a valid administrative claim for tax refund, the Court has no subject matter jurisdiction to consider the Gillespie's claim. The government has filed a response, and that is essentially the current posture of the case.
The Goofy Gillespie Group has filed various papers with the Court containing the usual nonsense -- even citing at least one of Haughty Hendrickson's court losses as a WIN on the subject of the meaning of the word "includes" as that term is used in the statute -- essentially, borrowing Hendrickson's hilarious habit of claiming that the court rulings -- all of which reject his frivolous tax theories -- are somehow rulings that uphold his arguments.
As others have said here in this forum, you can't fix stupid.
