Cspeter8 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 30, 2023 11:09 pm
No, he advises people, I believe in being pragmatic: not to use logic about why the income tax has to be voluntary, but to recognize that from peymon's view, the judges in the court system have extreme cognitive dissonance that prevents them from taking an unbiased look at the tax protestor's argument.
No, that is not what he advises. If it were, then he wouldn't have gone to court himself in the first place. He would have recognized it as complete futility. So, by your reasoning, he should have followed the same strategy that he sells to his followers.
Theoretically some day a supreme court majority might reverse the massive case law upholding the validity of the income tax.
Theoretically? Or just a possibility? Either way, it won't happen just because somehow the Court suddenly recognizes Peymon's arguments and interpretation of the tax laws as the truth.
I may be mistaken, I was informed today that this exception about interst/dividend collection that can bypass usual due process has been in place for some time.
I have no idea of what you are referring to in regards to the collection due process. Perhaps you can provide more info and detail.
When you file a 1040 income tax form or any federal tax form, you give up the rights to your most private and sensitive financial information to the IRS. The IRS can then use these documents as evidence against you in a court of law, which can then force you to prove all expenses, deductions and credits that you claimed on your tax form. If you cannot prove such expenses, deductions and credits, you will end up paying a lot more money to the IRS, or even be sentenced to lengthy prison terms.
Most of the above is twisted or misinterpreted. If the IRS requests proof of the claims you made on your 1040 as part of an audit process, you don't have to provide it. The IRS then can summons you for the documents, but even then you don't have to surrender it. The IRS will have to go into US district court to enforce the summons and show the judge the reasons why they need those documents to complete the audit as well as show that they cannot get the information from other sources. And you have the right to go to court to quash the summons, showing the judge that the IRS request was unreasonable. All of those steps are available to every taxpayer who wishes to contest providing information to the IRS. What also is not mentioned is the numerous sources that is provided to the IRS by third parties who also have your private and sensitive financial information - sources that the IRS can use to reconstruct a taxpayer's probable income. Peymon's screed does not refer to any of this at all, which is dishonest because it leads the reader to believe that the only way they can evade taxes is to not file the return. And that is incorrect, because as we have seen in Peymon's case, refusing to file his returns did not help and he now has an assessed tax liability.
And the other twisted issue is claiming that the IRS can force you to prove expenses and credits. Why would anyone not wish to prove those facts in order to lower the IRS proposed tax liability? Only because they made false claims about those expenses. Otherwise, any taxpayer does not have to claim such credits on their return and the IRS will certainly not come asking for your expenses. The only thing typically required is that the taxpayer provide their income received for the tax year. And refusing to file the return is not going to stop the IRS from filing a return for you - just as they did in Peymon's situation and without any credits/expenses given to him.
You also give up your Fifth Amendment constitutional right to be silent and not give any information to the government that they could use to put you in prison.
And that is also twisted. The Supreme Court ruled in
US v. Sullivan (1927) that there is no constitutional right to refuse filing a return or provide financial information on the basis that it violates the 5th Amendment. So you can't give up a right that you did not have in the first place - nor can you exercise a right that you never had. And this basic position has been supported in subsequent appeal cases such as
US v. Brown (10th Cir, 1979),
US v. Neff (9th Cir, 1980), and
US v. Daly (8th Cir 1973).
you can show that you have relied on the official legal websites of the US government to conclude that you are not required to file and pay federal income, self-employment, or payroll taxes,
you wrote to your federal lawmakers asking whether they can show you that you are in error and show you the law that requires you to file and pay federal income taxes, and
your federal lawmakers were unable to show you that you are in error.
All of this is completely wrong for a number of reasons and will not suffice as a defense against tax evasion charges. There is no requirement that lawmakers have to prove to you that the law is correct and accurate nor show you how you are wrong. That is a job for the courts and the government prosecutors when you are facing trial. What Peymon is trying to fool his clients into believing that they can create a
Cheek defense by sending out the typical gibberish that he and other promoters sell them. This gibberish is typically a list of irrelevant, meaningless and pseudolegal questions that no lawmaker or other government prosecutor is going to waste time responding to. And then Peymon will tell his marks that because no one spent hours responding to this crap, it means this is a tacit admission that there is no law requiring you to file returns and pay taxes. So Peymon will say that you can argue in court that you can't be convicted because no one explained the law to you and showed it was correct.
The problem with all of that is that it is not true. Courts ignore that as a defense and will not accept it as a Cheek defense against willfulness. And again, Peymon did not argue this issue in his own suit. Instead he just claimed that the IRS couldn't get the proposed liability amount correct. If Peymon knows the correct and proper way to argue a non-filing case, then why did he not show the court that lawmakers failed to answer his questions about the tax law and prove to him that they are correct and legal?
Ok, let's do that:
Case #1 - Taxpayer had a proposed liability by the IRS that they contested in a due process hearing and then went to Tax Court, which IRS stipulated with the defendant to abate the liability due to the IRS failing to send the notice of deficiency to the last known address of the taxpayer. That is a critical fault of a mandatory requirement for the audit process. And the IRS recognizes it which is why they abated the liability. But it has nothing to do with the nonsense that Peymon argues. Any tax lawyer would have recognized the issue and raised it during the due process hearing. Why Peymon and FLS did not do so until it got to Tax Court indicates that he overlooked it (showing his ignorance of tax procedure) or just wanted to get the case into court at the taxpayer's expense so he could pretend that he had an amazing victory. The problem here are the magic words "without prejudice" in the stipulation. That simply means that the IRS can proceed again with the assessment (provided that they follow procedures correctly). Since I am not seeing FLS claiming any other victories for this case, I am guessing that the taxpayer got assessed again. Some victory.
Case #2 - Taxpayer was denied a Collection Due Process hearing. Peymon gets them into Tax Court and IRS Counsel moves to remand the case back to Appeals so that the taxpayer can have a face-to-face hearing that they requested. Again, this is a procedural issue and Peymon didn't use any of his stupid arguments to get the taxpayer out of their liability. I note that the IRS motion mentions that the taxpayer had at one point been arguing frivolous positions. No mention of what happened to this taxpayer after they got their face-to-face meeting.
I went through the rest of the so-called "victories" and they were basically for the same issue - IRS not following established guidelines for providing proper notice for deficiency assessments or collection activity. Only one case appears to have actually gone to trial (see below), all the rest were settled or resolved prior to trial. None of the cases featured any relation between their results and Peymon's theories on the income tax being illegal.
The one case that went to trial resulted in a win for the taxpayer because the IRS was unable to verify the reported income (due to the agent not keeping accurate records of the audit, having faulty memory and no third-party records due to the employer being out of business). Again, this result had nothing to do with Peymon arguing his nonsense in open court and the court ruling in favor of his "client" due to Peymon's so-called brilliance.
In summary, all Peymon is doing is capitalizing on IRS unforced errors that should have never been made in the first place and for which no court is going to stand. That is the law and which is why the IRS immediately resolved most of these cases before they ever had to go to trial. But none of these prove that Peymon is correct about his frivolous positions. While I can agree that he did a service to these people in getting the IRS to adhere to its procedures, the sad thing is that he misleading people by implying his stupid anti-tax arguments are correct. If anything, these examples show that the courts and the IRS do ultimately follow the law and are not just rubber-stamping decisions.
I would like to follow up with Peymon regarding this recent appeals court loss (and post here his viewpoint on it), but feel unable to collect all the pertinant details to effectively question Peymon.
The link to the court case is in the promoter thread about Mottahedeh, I am not going to bother to link it for you, since it will be a waste of my time. And I can save you some time by guessing what Peymon will say. He will claim that the court and the IRS are corrupt and/or unable to interpret the law correctly. They didn't listen to him, they violated procedures and his rights. I doubt that he will say he made any mistakes in his case. And he will tell you a bunch of lies to make it seem that he is correct.
And then you will believe him.