Dr. Caligari wrote:It seems difficult to believe that an IRS subpoena for relevant personal documents could invoke an act of production privilege.
Au contraire. I have invoked the privilege in response to IRS summonses in several cases.
If the target of the summons has unreported income, and the documents which would demonstrate that fact are not ones the IRS already knows of, production of those documents in response to an order compelling compliance with an IRS summons would indeed be "(1) compelled, (2) testimonial, and (3) incriminating."
The point in my original post.
It seems to me in their haste to make a tax protester argument many faced with a summons or subsequent order to show cause fail to understand the basic right to reserve silence.
Or, am I reading you incorrectly?
In the case of a non-filer or taxpayer with unreported income [as you suggest], it's obvious one purpose of a summons would be to make a determination of liability. It's also obvious that in connection with a frivolous argument, it could also lead to CI.
On that basis, the target should understand the right to reserve silence.
I've seen it in cases where a taxpayer has used trusts and other entities to avoid and/or evade taxation. There's always an element of willfulness to consider, and what might be construed by one as willful intent to evade could only be a good-faith misunderstanding.
At least during the summons and show cause phases, the target should reserve silence and let willfulness be proven down the road. Of course, such a tactic might be more appropriate for someone who has reason to fear investigation, such as association with a tax scheme.
If one or more providers or victims have faced litigation, it should cause a subsequent victim to exercise more caution. For instance, if even one person having used CtC has faced litigation or the loss of their refund, that should cause the next person to reconsider.
Or, in the case of summons, if one or more persons have been unsuccessful using a certain argument, that should cause the next person to rethink the approach. In the case of tax denial, we're dealing with both a mindset bordering on fever and an ignorance of law.
It's hard to convince anyone with either the fever or ignorance to be rational.
Anyway, I think the good Doctor has cleared up my thoughts on reserving silence.