The following letter was delivered to the Commissioner of the IRS from (at the time) a
CID, Criminal Investigation Agent of the IRS and was never responded to.
It is posted at: www.freedomabovefortune.com
February 25, 1999
Mr. Charles O. Rossotti
Commissioner, Internal Revenue Service
1111 Constitution Avenue NW
Washington D.C. 20224
Dear Commissioner Rossotti:
I am deeply saddened by the response, or lack thereof, to my report entitled Investigating
The Federal Income Tax: A Preliminary Report, submitted to my immediate supervisor on
February 8, 1999. Although I am very confident that my group manager and the Chief of my
division properly and swiftly submitted my report through channels as I had requested, I
am not so confident about the reception the report received after it left my Chiefs
desk.
Because I am not in management, I can only speculate which Internal Revenue Service or
Treasury Department officials have been briefed on my report or its contents. I have
learned that, at a minimum, the Assistant Commissioner, Criminal Investigation has been
briefed. I have also been told that, because of the unusual nature of my request, any
actions taken by my group manager and my Chief resulted from advice they had received from
government legal counsel. I have no way of knowing if you
personally have been briefed about my report or its contents. I will assume, for purposes
of this letter, that you have been briefed.
The last official correspondence that I received from IRS upper management was a
memorandum signed by my Chief February 17, 1999. The treatment I have received since
receipt of that memorandum, when my duty firearm was taken from me and I was placed on
administrative leave, has left me utterly baffled.
Under ordinary circumstances, I would not feel it was appropriate for a Special Agent from
the Criminal Investigation Division to condemn or criticize the actions of the
Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service or those management officials below him.
However, these are clearly not ordinary circumstances. As such, I must make some
statements that are not intended to show disrespect, yet, it is likely they will not be
well received. However, my duty and oath of office dictate that I make these statements
regardless of their reception.
I am very confused about the treatment I have received for a number of reasons. The first
reason is because, on April 28, 1998, you sent out a memorandum to all IRS employees
regarding "Reporting of Misconduct, Fraud, Waste and Abuse." In the memorandum,
you stated that "[a]ll Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employees have an obligation to
report misconduct, fraud, waste and abuse. The IRS has a stringent policy that guarantees
employees freedom from reprisal when they report such
action." You further stated that "[e]very employee should take proactive steps
to report wrongful actions." Apparently, I was mistaken to have relied upon your
memorandum as a commitment to protect me from reprisal or other adverse treatment.
The second reason has to do with the background investigations I endured prior to my
appointment as a federal law enforcement officer and the reasons those background
investigations are administered. Before being appointed as an IRS-CID Special Agent, I
applied to, and was nearly hired by, the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Unfortunately, a
hiring freeze occurred at an inopportune time and the FBI was unable to extend an
employment offer to me. Despite the hiring freeze, a thorough background investigation was
conducted. Based on my conversations with FBI recruiters, I passed the background
investigation. Later, when the IRS Criminal Investigation Division extended an employment
offer to me, I was subjected to a second background investigation, this one conducted by
the Inspection Division of the Internal Revenue Service. Based on the
fact that I was eventually hired, I think it is a fair to assume that I passed that
background investigation also.
It has always been my understanding, and I would certainly like someone to correct me if I
am wrong, that these background investigations occur for one primary reason to
ensure that the candidate being investigated is worthy of holding a position of public
trust. There is no doubt that federal law enforcement officers hold positions of public
trust. They have the authority to investigate, interrogate, arrest, and, when necessary,
use deadly force against, American citizens. I think any reasonable citizen would conclude
that passing two background investigations, one conducted by the FBI, was a good
indication that I possessed the integrity necessary to hold a position of public trust. I
think any reasonable citizen would find it more than a little disturbing
that top IRS officials, who spent so much time and effort assuring themselves of my
integrity and worthiness to hold such a position of public trust, would all but ignore my
request to review very compelling evidence of constitutional abuses.
The third reason for my confusion is that the reference to my oath to support and defend
the Constitution of the United States from all enemies foreign and domestic, that I
included in my February 8, 1999 letter, has been summarily ignored. I thought I made
myself very clear in my letter. I do not take swearing an oath to God lightly. Apparently
even a devout commitment to an oath sworn to God is not worthy of response from top IRS
officials.
The fourth reason for my confusion is that my reference to both the old and new IRS
Mission Statements was completely ignored. Ill repeat those Mission Statements again
here:
Previous Mission Statement (see Site)
The purpose of the IRS is to collect the proper amount of tax revenues at the least cost
to the public, and in a manner that warrants the highest degree of public confidence in
our integrity, efficiency and fairness. (Emphasis added)
Revised Mission Statement (See Site)
Provide Americas taxpayers top quality service by helping them understand and meet
their tax responsibilities and by applying the tax law with integrity and fairness to all.
(Emphasis added)
If an IRS Criminal Investigation Division Special Agent writes his superiors and in all
sincerity questions whether or not the IRS Mission Statement is truly being adhered to,
what are American taxpayers supposed to think when that agents questions are
rebuffed?
The fifth reason for my confusion is that on January 13, 1999, I joined hundreds of IRS
Central California District employees in attending a mandatory training class on the IRS
Restructuring and Reform Act (RRA 98) Of 1998 1203(b) Conduct Provisions. I
took notes at that training and wrote down some exact quotes. For example, we were told
that "the rights of the taxpayer have become paramount." You, yourself, as
Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, emphasized in your
videotaped message that IRS employees must always consider the taxpayer, "provide top
quality service," and you also said that "we must scrupulously observe taxpayer
rights." Bob Wenzel, Deputy Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, said in his
videotaped message that IRS employees "must ensure that taxpayer rights are
protected." The phrase "taxpayer rights come first" was repeated over and
over and over again.
As you can see, I have numerous reasons for my confusion. Based on my experiences of the
last week, I have come to the conclusion that the Internal Revenue Service, as an agency,
demands total integrity from employees and taxpayers alike, but doesnt deliver
integrity itself The Internal Revenue Service, as an agency, demands total loyalty but
delivers little. The Internal Revenue Service, as an agency, professes to have the utmost
concern in "collecting the proper amount of tax" in a "manner that warrants
the highest degree of public confidence in our integrity, efficiency and fairness"
but, in reality, appears to care less.
You have undoubtedly noticed that I have made repeated references to the Internal Revenue
Service as an agency. I make this distinction intentionally because, although I have lost
all faith in the Internal Revenue Service as an agency, I still have tremendous faith in,
and respect for, the employees of the Internal Revenue Service, especially the Special
Agents and support personnel of the Criminal Investigation Division. Virtually every one
of the hundreds of IRS employees I have come in contact with throughout the country have
been professional, hard-working, fair-minded, and honorable. They are good and decent
public servants and they deserve the praise of the American people.
However, I believe they are misguided. I make such a bold statement only because I was
misguided myself. I used to believe that the Internal Revenue Service, as an agency,
"scrupulously observes taxpayer rights." I used to believe that the Internal
Revenue Service administers the federal income tax fairly and legally. I used to believe
that the Internal Revenue Service would not knowingly trample on the rights of innocent
Americans just to preserve the income tax system. It is with great sadness that I say I no
longer hold any of those beliefs.
My only hope is that those same professional, hard-working, fair-minded, and honorable IRS
employees that I met throughout my short career in the IRS Criminal Investigation Division
will take some time out of their busy schedules and learn more about the basis for the tax
system they administer and the Constitution to which they swore a solemn oath. Only then
can they truly deserve to hold a position of public trust.
Based on the obvious futility of continuing to work for an agency that has standards and
practices so different from what it professes and standards and practices so contrary to
my own, I am officially resigning from the position of IRS Criminal Investigation Division
Special Agent, effective as of the date of this letter.
I hope and pray that, as the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, you will see to
it that the evidence contained in my report is given a fair and impartial evaluation. The
evidence is well known by millions of Americans and they anxiously await a reply. Every
day that you wait is another day that more Americans will come to mistrust you. Every day
that you wait is another day that more professional, hard-working, fair-minded, and
honorable IRS employees will be placed in harms way because of that growing
mistrust. I implore you to use your position of leadership to resolve these very serious
threats to our freedom and our Constitution.
Sincerely,
Joseph R. Banister