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Occam's Banana
10-24-2014, 02:55 PM
Legal Victory for the IRS
http://bastiat.mises.org/2014/10/legal-victory-for-the-irs/
David Howden (24 October 2014)

With the IRS scandals of early 2014 all but a distant memory, some closure is coming to the groups that the long arm of the tax law harassed. Unfortunately the verdicts arenīt going (http://www.politico.com/story/2014/10/irs-tea-party-legal-victory-112145.html) the way the affected would like.


The IRS may have inadvertently figured out how to win its legal battles against aggrieved tea party groups: Give them what they wanted in the first place — tax-exempt status.

That was a major reason a Republican-appointed federal judge on Thursday threw out two lawsuits brought by more than 40 conservative groups seeking remedies for being singled out in the tea party targeting scandal, a victory for the IRS.

More troubling than the apparent lack of justice (we wronged you, but then later made it up to you so we donīt need to be punished?!) is the reasoning (http://www.politico.com/story/2014/10/irs-tea-party-legal-victory-112145.html)behind the Federal Judgeīs decision.


Judge Reggie Walton of the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia dismissed almost all counts brought against the tax-collecting agency in two cases, ruling that both were essentially moot now that the IRS granted the groups their tax-exempt status that had been held up for years.Walton, a President George W. Bush-appointee, also said individual IRS officials could not be fined in their individual capacity for allowing such treatment because it could hurt future tax enforcement.

I guess I missed the memo where enforcement of the law included provisos to protect the ability of the law-breaker to further break the law in the future. I mean, wasnīt the original problem that the IRS was unduly harassing certain groups? If thatīs the case, and the IRS is found guilty (which it was, just not punished), shouldnīt the law try to stop such harassment from happening again.

To use an analogy, letīs say I park in of my neighbourīs lane so he canīt leave to get to work in the morning. A couple days later I move my car, and the obstruction is gone. My neighbour takes me to court, and the court agrees that I unduly blocked him, but Iīve since moved my car so itīs a moot point. My neighbour says thatīs ridiculous, and wants charges against me for trespassing on his property and stopping him from leaving. The court finishes by telling my neighbour that nothing can happen to me personally because that would dissuade me from parking in his lane in the future and blocking him in.

If you think that Iīm getting off scot-free in the example above, I can only think of what you think of the IRS right now.

Ronin Truth
10-24-2014, 03:07 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Law_that_Never_Was

wizardwatson
10-24-2014, 03:08 PM
Tyranny 101

Rule 254: Make sure the judicial proceedings for any government crimes exceeds the general public's memory retention then settle out of court and make more draconian laws to better avoid getting caught doing said crime in the future.

Brian4Liberty
10-24-2014, 03:19 PM
Tea Party lawsuits against the IRS thrown out of court
http://benswann.com/tea-party-lawsuits-against-the-irs-thrown-out-of-court/

3285

By Zach McAuliffe - Oct 23, 2014

The courts have ruled in favor of the IRS Thursday after federal courts in DC threw-out lawsuits being brought against the agency by more than 40 conservative groups seeking compensation for the delays and scrutiny of their tax-exempt forms and applications.

Two cases involving the groups True the Vote and Linchpins of Liberty were deemed moot by Judge Reggie Walton of the US District Court of the District of Columbia, after it was made clear the IRS had granted the groups their desired tax-exempt status. The case involving Linchpins of Liberty also involved the other 40 conservative groups who had banded together and polled their efforts for the case.

“After the plaintiff initiated this case, its application to the IRS for tax-exempt status was approved by the IRS,” said Judge Walton, according to Politico. “The allegedly unconstitutional governmental conduct, which delayed the processing of the plaintiff’s tax exempt application and brought about this litigation, is no longer impacting the plaintiff.”
...
More: http://benswann.com/tea-party-lawsuits-against-the-irs-thrown-out-of-court/

Acala
10-24-2014, 03:53 PM
Might not survive on appeal. There is an exception to the rule of mootness for challenges to actions that are capable of repetition but evade review.

presence
10-24-2014, 08:54 PM
“After the plaintiff initiated this case, its application to the IRS for tax-exempt status was approved by the IRS,” said Judge Walton, according to Politico. “The allegedly unconstitutional governmental conduct, which delayed the processing of the plaintiff’s tax exempt application and brought about this litigation, is no longer impacting the plaintiff.”



So if I get robbed last week but not this week then my case against the thief is moot?

Zippyjuan
10-25-2014, 11:27 AM
Court said IRS changed the policy and granted the request they were suing for so the suit no longer had a basis to proceed.

From Brian4Liberty's post:

“After the plaintiff initiated this case, its application to the IRS for tax-exempt status was approved by the IRS,” said Judge Walton, according to Politico. “The allegedly unconstitutional governmental conduct, which delayed the processing of the plaintiff’s tax exempt application and brought about this litigation, is no longer impacting the plaintiff.”