http://www.losthorizons.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=752I just received my CDP Notice of Determination from Appeals today [Friday, July 18, 2008]. They ruled against me and propose that the lien/levy be used to collect my outstanding balances.
Elsewhere in IRS-land, I have 2 returns (TY2003 and TY2004) that received 3178SC letters – which I responded to last week.
There are 3 years that I have not had any correspondence on since April 2008. These returns haven't been responded to yet.
The determination letter states that I have 30 days to file a petition in tax court. It <appears> that I could also file in district court?
Here are my questions:
1) What do I do now? I was hoping that my amended returns would be processed by this time and my balances would be zero. Since they are not, I have no idea how to proceed.
2) I have no legal background and I am not comfortable filing a petition in any court. I need help!!!
3) The only other option I see is to try and work out an installment agreement and hope that the amended returns get processed in the interim – but why would they if I am paying monthly?
I really need help. I have no idea what to do next. I feel like I am at the bottom of the 9th and I am in enemy territory.
Please help.
You need help? Here are some tips.
First, you normally should have 90 days to file a Tax Court petition, not 30 days. Go back and read the notice. Is it a statutory notice of deficiency (90 day letter), or is it just a 30 day letter?
Second, you generally cannot maintain federal tax litigation in U.S. District Court without first paying the tax that the IRS says is owed in full, and then suing for a refund. It's called the Flora full payment rule.
Third, since you say that you have no legal background and since you say that you are not comfortable filing a petition in any court, and since you sound desperate, we will assume that your use of the moniker "TaxResearcher" at losthorizons was nothing more than an unconscious attempt to provide some black humour for the benefit of the regulars here at Quatloos who, unlike yourself, are not lost somewhere in the parallel universe of PeterEricBlowhardMeister delusion about the nature of U.S. federal income taxation. If you were trying to provide a few laughs -- congratulations; it worked.
Fourth, try not to mix your sports metaphors. The "bottom of the 9th" is a baseball concept, whereas "enemy territory" is a football metaphor. Mixing your sports metaphors automatically invalidates any federal income tax positions you take.
Seriously, you've really gotten yourself into a mess -- in part by arrogating legal knowledge that you obviously don't have. You trusted the ravings of Peter Eric Hendrickson, an ex-con with no legal, tax, or accounting expertise - a guy who has already spent time in prison on a federal tax conviction. Blowhard Hendrickson is wrong. Cracking the Code is wrong.
Reallll smart. You have no idea what to do next, eh? Welllllll "TaxResearcher", Petey-poo and his followers cannot help you. He and the rest of his followers are as clueless as you are.
By the way, Petey has his hands full with his own federal tax problems. You see, he tried to use Cracking the Code too.
You want help? You want some good advice. Abandon the Cracking the Code crap and try to get yourself right with the tax man. Grovel. Beg. Really humiliate yourself. Before it's too late.