Dairy Farmer and trumped up "Structuring" charge

Nazaroo

New member
Maryland Dairy farmer had all his assets seized because he made
regular withdrawals to pay bills.

The IRS said not only do you go to prison for doing that,
but you owe us directly all the money (your own money)
that you withdrew (from your own bank account),
and now congress is supposed to stop this outrageous powers against
honest US citizens.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA3lDObDc2g

The special powers were meant to seize money from crime, drug dealing,
extortion, or money marked for terrorists.

However, the IRS has been simply stealing money from honest citizens.
 

Angel4Truth

New member
Hall of Fame
Rules Change on I.R.S. Seizures, Too Late for Some

APRIL 30, 2015

Lyndon McLellan, who owns a convenience store in Fairmont, N.C., is trying to recover $107,702.66, which was seized by the I.R.S. last year even though he was never charged with a crime.

Under mounting pressure, the Internal Revenue Service and the Justice Department have announced in recent months that they will no longer use a law designed to go after drug dealers and terrorists to seize the bank accounts of small business owners who are not suspected of criminal activity. But Lyndon McLellan, the owner of a convenience store in rural Fairmont, N.C., where catfish sandwiches go for $2.75, is still trying to recover the $107,702.66 — his entire business bank account — that was seized by the I.R.S. last summer.


Carole Hinders at her modest, cash-only Mexican restaurant in Arnolds Park, Iowa. Last year tax agents seized her funds.
Law Lets I.R.S. Seize Accounts on Suspicion, No Crime RequiredOCT. 25, 2014
Gov. Susana Martinez of New Mexico has yet to sign a bill that would end the contentious practice of civil forfeiture.
Bill to End Civil Forfeiture in New Mexico Awaits Move by Governor MartinezAPRIL 9, 2015
Carole Hinders, owner of Mrs. Lady’s Mexican restaurant in Arnolds Park, Iowa, at her home. Ms. Hinders was targeted because a pattern of bank deposits that the I.R.S. found suspicious.


Under the increasingly unpopular practice of civil forfeiture, law enforcement agents can seize property suspected of having ties to crime, even if no charges are filed — and then begin forfeiture proceedings, in which the burden of proof is on the owner. Often the cost of fighting such a seizure is greater than the value of the assets seized, and law enforcement agencies get to keep forfeiture proceeds. Such a windfall, critics say, creates perverse incentives, and the lack of due process runs counter to the central tenets of the American justice system.

Mr. McLellan’s money was seized under a subset of civil forfeiture law that governs cash deposits under $10,000, the threshold at which a bank is required to report the transaction to the government. But limiting deposits to less than $10,000 to evade the reporting requirement, known as structuring, is illegal in its own right. Structuring seizures have ballooned in recent years as law enforcement task forces comb through hundreds of thousands of bank reports, often using warrants based on nothing more than a pattern of deposits. The I.R.S. alone made 639 structuring seizures in 2012, up from 114 in 2005.

The seizure dragnet has ensnared small business owners who operate with cash and may have legitimate reasons to keep their deposits low, or do not know that doing so could get them into trouble. In Michigan, for example, the owners of a drugstore had an insurance policy that only covered the loss of $10,000 or less in cash. In the case of Carole Hinders, whose modest Mexican restaurant in Iowa specialized in Insane Tacos, she was following advice dispensed by her mother decades before: that smaller deposits meant less paperwork for the bank.

After these cases and others received public scrutiny, the I.R.S. announced last October that it would no longer pursue structuring cases unless the money was tied to some other illegal activity. The Justice Department followed suit in March. But neither change in policy was retroactive, and the United States attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina has continued to pursue the forfeiture of Mr. McLellan’s money, though no crime has been charged. The Justice Department declined to comment on an open case.

“It was like I was just slapped in the face with something. I didn’t know what was going on,” said Mr. McLellan, 50, who has a 10th-grade education and has built a small gas station into a convenience store and restaurant. “You work for something for 13, 14 years, and they take it in 13, 14 minutes.”

During a congressional hearing in February, Representative George Holding, a Republican from North Carolina, referred to Mr. McLellan’s case, saying no crime other than structuring had been alleged. “If that case exists, then it’s not following the policy,” John Koskinen, the commissioner of the I.R.S., said.

But the prosecutor on the case, Steve West, was unmoved. Notified of the hearing by Mr. McLellan’s lawyer at the time, he responded with concern that the seizure warrant in the case, filed under seal but later given to Mr. McLellan, had been handed over to a congressional committee, according to an email exchange provided to The New York Times by the Institute for Justice, a libertarian public interest law firm that has taken over the case.

“Your client needs to resolve this or litigate it,” Mr. West wrote. “But publicity about it doesn’t help. It just ratchets up feelings in the agency.” He concluded with a settlement offer in which the government would keep half the money.

Mr. McLellan’s new lawyer, Robert Everett Johnson, said the fact that prosecutors refuse to drop the case shows that self-restraint by federal agencies is not enough and that Congress needs to rein in civil forfeiture. Republicans, led by Senators Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mike Lee of Utah, have filed a bill in the House and Senate to change the practice, and the Judiciary Committees of both houses are working on a proposal.
 
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