Fed Marshalls sieze IBT in Indy

"Pay us our taxes in the quantity and manner we proscribe, or we'll use force or the threat of it against you to make you comply."

That pretty much sum it up?

If the taxes are paid by the individuals involved, then what beef does the government have with the church?

And to be honest, I would be just as angry if they did the same to a business entity.

I believe Tamara stated the real reason for this methodology earlier. If each and every tax-paying American had to sit down and stroke a check on April 15th for a full year's taxes rather than having our employer's piecemeal it over twelve months, there would be some SERIOUS changes in a very short period of time. Since the people who run the government understand that as well, they force the employers to act as their agents in the matter. If you don't cooperate, you lose your business (or church).

Who answers to whom in this system of government?

And I'd also like to take a moment to point out that the people who carried out this debacle don't answer to Bill Clinton anymore. So much for reliance on "faith-based institutions" by this President.
 
"It doesn't matter what the church says; It matters what the LAW says" :eek: :barf:
-viator

Welcome to TFL viator. I see many heated arguements in your future.

When they came for the IBT I didn't stand up because.... (you know the rest)


DC: I searched TFL and there have been several threads concerning this subject as it unfolded. One of which involved a vow from Militia leaders to violently oppose seizing of the Church. This may have been the Fed's excuse to handle it as they did.

Don't get me wrong! I am NOT defending the Feds here... Rather, I'm dissapointed by the Militia's absence...

Concerning Rev Jackson/Sharpton: Remember when a bunch of us phoned the IRS and reported the MMM as tax evaders? I doubt it did any good but it was fun. I feel a law abiding, civic duty coming on.

[Edited by Jordan on 02-15-2001 at 07:42 PM]
 
Jordan,

Thanks for the welcome. I responded to several posts yesterday, but I did something boneheaded and none of them went through. I didn't have the time to retype them.

There are a lot of “Johnny-come-lately”s to the IBT fiasco. Many of these are reacting to sensationalist claims that are simply wrong. For example, the senior Dixon blamed the raid on Bush, claiming that he had a deal with Bush. However, the younger Dixon, who went to Washington with the church’s attorney (daddy didn’t go), states emphatically: “We had no deal with the government.” The son wasn’t surprised at the raid. And yet, what do you read on the Internet but the father’s erroneous claim?! Bush and Ashcroft did us in!!! We had a deal!!! Where are those quoting the son’s correction of the father? I have yet to read this quote. Perhaps it just doesn’t fit into the mindset of those who just want to look for something to complain about.

I have lived in Indianapolis for nine years. I have followed this case for nine long years. I was here when the IRS fist filed liens against the IBT in 1993. I heard the beginning of the recent seizure on the radio and watched it live on TV. I have read numerous articles over the YEARS as this battle has progressed. I have seen a bazillion TV documentaries on IBT. So I am not going to get inflamed and start acting irrationally at the spurious charges that are leveled. I have followed this and thought about it for nearly a decade. Longer than that. I have, over the last two decades, researched and written papers on the relationship of church and state.

One of the posts from yesterday that I messed up and didn’t get through was a quotation from yesterday’s The Indianapolis Star.

Begin quote: “Church members are clearly passionate in their beliefs, but they are just as clearly wrong,” said Steve Johnson, an Indiana University tax law professor.

“We’re not talking about a complex area of law here, “Johnson said. Rules requiring employers to withhold taxes from employees’ paychecks are no more onerous to a church than to any other business. That means they do not infringe on a church’s protections under the Constitution, he said.

“This is slam-dunk territory,” Johnson said. “The church has no argument.” End quote.

For nearly a decade, I have heard and read expert after expert say that IBT was wrong. Dead wrong. Where are all of the experts defending the IBT? There aren’t any because the IBT doesn’t have a legal leg to stand on. As one who has been self-employed for roughly 30 years, I know that what IBT was trying to pull off in regard to sham “self-employment” was illegal. I couldn’t have gotten away with it in my business. And as one who is aware of the laws regarding who is a “minister” for IRS purposes- please note the “for IRS purposes”- I have known since the middle to late 1980’s that what IBT was trying to do is illegal.

They came to take the IBT and I didn’t do anything to stop it… because the actions of the IBT were illegal. I have known for 9 years that this day was coming. I’m sorry that some of you are just beginning to learn of this, but that is beyond my control. The one thing we can control is our reasoned discussion of this sad event.

Pax,

viator

[Edited by viator on 02-15-2001 at 10:54 PM]
 
Jordan:
The Indiana,Michigan, and Ohio Milliita's were ready to come and help IBT. Reverand Dixon asked them to stand down and they complied.
I believe this another step to total Govt. control.
The IRS is completly out of control. We need major reforms now. So what we gonna do write some lame a$$ed senator or congress creep and ask them to help. I'll just sit back and wait until the right time comes to do what needs to be done.
 
hammer4nc wrote:

IBT is not trying to reform FICA tax witholding practice. They are objecting to govt. infringement on the constitution, freedom of speech and religion, intrusions into private education, FACILITATED by tax policy. Such arguments are disallowed, or given short shrift in tax court.


I respond:
And where is their freedom of speech being infringed? IBT is very vocal. They are on the radio, TV, and in the papers everyday. They preach what they want from the pulpit. Where lies the infringement? And who is the constitutional scholar who supports IBT’s contention that their rights have been infringed? They have been tried and found guilty of breaking the law in court.


hammer4nc wrote:
These administrative rules have precious little moral or ethical implications, when considered in a vacuum. To justify destruction of a church, based on a narrow legal reading of FICA witholding policy, while at the same time disregarding the constitutional issues raised, is missing the forest for the trees. OR intentional misdirection, and doesn't survive the reasonable-man test. Nice try, though.

I respond:
First, the church is not destroyed; the church is people, not buildings. Second, for all people – and the Christian who should truly be aware of this- administrative rules have vast moral implications: if you break them you go to hell. That is pretty major to me! This is not a narrow reading of tax law. See elsewhere in this thread where I have quoted a tax expert. He says it is slam-dunk. IBT doesn’t have a legal - or scriptural - leg to stand on.

I am not certain where you are heading at the end of your statements. Are you asserting that I am intentionally trying to misdirect those in this thread?
 
The Law That Never Was.

There seems to be some question as to the constitutionality of the 16th Amendment, as in, it was never ratified?

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=17398

Sunday, February 6, 2000



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUNDAY Q&A
'The law that never was'
Geoff Metcalf's interview answers question, 'Is 16th Amendment legal?'

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By Geoff Metcalf



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© 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

A criminal investigator for the Illinois Department of Revenue for approximately 10 years, William J. Benson of South Holland, Illinois has been at the vanguard of debate and controversy surround the 16th Amendment for almost two decades. In 1984 he embarked upon a year-long project to examine the process of the ratification of the 16th Amendment and to determine whether or not it had been lawfully adopted as part of the U.S. Constitution. The culmination of Benson's work is the book, "The Law That Never Was."

Question: You have been engaged in this 16th amendment battle for almost 20 years. How did it start?

Answer: I was a former investigator for the Illinois Department of Revenue. I discovered a great deal of corruption within that department and for that the Director fired me. I told him if he fired me, I would sue him for violation of First Amendment rights. Six and half years later we were in court. We had a jury of six; it was a civil trial. They awarded me $353,000 for violation of First Amendment rights.

I began working with my attorney, Andy Spiegal. We had a willful failure to file case in Indiana. Red Beckman had some documentation that showed there was some serious problem with the 16th Amendment. He got the documentation from a man named Dean Hurst, from Cheyenne, Wyoming. I purchased that documentation and made every attempt to have Andy get it before the court, and the Judge said no.

The judge gave us three real good reasons why he did that: The documentation is not notarized, it is not certified, and you do not have a witness to testify to.

That evening I said, "Okay, the judge has given us our marching orders. The only thing we have to do is go to all 48 states and get the documentation" to see if the documents have any validity. The attorney said, "Bill, you're crazy, you can't do that." I said, "Sure you can."

Q: How long did it take to do that?

A: It took a full year. There is not one state -- not one -- that has ratified the 16th Amendment to the United States Constitution. One of the most amazing documents I found was in the national archives in Washington D.C. -- a 16-page memorandum written by Ruben J. Clark, then the attorney for Secretary of State Philander Chase Knox, on February 15, 1913. What he says is that in the certified copies of the amendment passed by the legislatures of the several states ratifying the 16th Amendment, it appears that only four of those resolutions -- Arizona, North Dakota, Tennessee and New Mexico -- have quoted absolutely accurately and correctly what was proposed by Congress. The other 33 resolutions contain either errors of capitalization, spelling or wording. ...

Q: So what's the big deal? Why are errors of capitalization, spelling or wording so significant?

A: On page 15 of the 16-page memorandum, the attorney says, "further under the Constitution, a Legislature is prohibited from altering 'in any way' the resolution proposed by Congress." The right of the Legislature is merely to approve or disapprove the amendment. The last page is also interesting because it says the department has not received the copy of the resolution passed by the state of Minnesota, but the secretary of the governor of the state has officially notified the department that legislators of that state have ratified the proposed 16th amendment.

Q: Here's the obvious question that comes up all the time. Say it was a bureaucratic oversight, a procedural glitch or something. Why are we still saddled with this thing? The reality check is, if you don't comply you end up in a whole world of hurt, as you know from personal experience.

A: Oh, there isn't any question about it. And that is why I continue to defy the federal government. That is why, when we were in Washington (at the National Press Club) I said, "I have waited 15 years to get behind these microphones, and I challenge the United States, I challenge the Justice Department, to come and get me. Take me, and leave these people alone." Let's get the 16th Amendment argument on the table once and for all before a jury and let them decide.

Q: Why don't they just drag you into court and resolve the controversy once and for all?

A: I wish they would. This has been going on now for 18 years. They cannot win with the 16th Amendment argument.

Q: Bill, at this event you guys had in Washington D.C. at the National Press Club in July, it seemed like a collection of former Geoff Metcalf guests, including Joe Bannister.

Joe Bannister is a former IRS agent -- a badge-carrying, gun-carrying agent who after listening to my radio program with interviews of other people and hearing discussions about this issue conducted a research analysis of his own to find out if he was enforcing a law that was a law or not. He submitted his findings to his superiors and asked them to either confirm or deny this stuff, or at least look into it. They basically said, "We'll be happy to accept your resignation, but we are not going to respond."

A: They forced him to resign. I think the entire nation owes Joe a great deal because of the courage it took for a special agent from the Internal Revenue Service to do what Joe Bannister did. On C-SPAN Joe Bannister told the entire listening audience that the IRS was a fraud, and that the 16th Amendment had not been ratified.

Q: It is fascinating that the first time you guys had a get together, it was broadcast on C-SPAN. I think they had the largest requests they ever had for any taped shows, and they ain't cheap. Yet, when you came back, they wouldn't even put you on the air.

A: That's true. I think the problem that arose was with the promoter of the program. He made a mistake. He went ahead and released a press announcement to the national press in Washington and to the President and right on down and told them what we were going to talk about.

The first session on July 2nd they had to bring in four people, two cameras, the lights and the whole thing, and we were on for three hours and 28 minutes. C-SPAN aired that program on four separate occasions. But they didn't show up on the second one and it was in my personal opinion because the cat was let out of the bag, so to speak, because of the error of the promoter.

Q: Bill, regarding this whole 16th Amendment issue, some folks say, "Well, it's an interesting academic argument, and they may be right on the 'technical' aspects of it, but the reality check is the golden rule -- and the guy with the gold makes the rules."

Were you ever approached by anyone "in government" regarding the documentation you had collected?

A: Yes I was. In 1985, prior to volume one being printed, Mrs. Benson had received a call from an attorney by the name of Warren Richardson. Warren said, "I am making this call on behalf of Senator Orrin Hatch. And of course," he said, "you know who he is? You tell Bill that it is an absolute emergency that he call Washington D.C. immediately."

Q: Did you call them immediately?

A: No, I had no emergency. I was lecturing on the 16th amendment. I did call them in a few days. Warren Richardson said, "I am making this call on behalf of Senator Orrin Hatch." He said "Bill, you cannot permit that book to get in the hands of the kooks out there. We know what you are doing."

I said, "Warren, by your making this telephone call to me you're one of the biggest kooks in D.C."

He said, "You don't understand what I'm trying to do? You have all of the books printed that you want. You name the number of books, and then you put a price on each and every book, and we will pay it. But then we want you never ever again to speak to one person, never again to get on one radio station, one television station or one group of people."

Q: Was that all?

A: No. Warren then said, "The last thing we want are all 17,000 certified, notarized documents that you have -- and you will be a multi-millionaire."

Q: What was your response?

A: I told him thank you, but no thanks. In fact, I told him to "go to hell!" I'm not for sale. America is not for sale. What I am fighting for is freedom, and that is exactly what I told Warren Richardson. I told him to carry that message right back to Orrin Hatch.

Q: You made that announcement at the second event in D.C. that C-SPAN chose not to broadcast. Did Orrin Hatch's office contact you to confirm, deny or threaten or try to sue you?

A: No, they have not.

Q: Have you made any effort to get in touch with them?

A: I haven't made any effort to get in touch with Orrin Hatch since 1985. I was waiting for the proper forum to release this information. I thought C-SPAN was that forum, because you're speaking to millions of people, not groups of 100 or 200, and it would get all over the country. But C-SPAN didn't show up.

Q: Bill, why is this whole 16th Amendment issue so critical?

A: In order for the federal government to collect anything from you, they must have a law. The 16th Amendment is what they collect the tax on. And I have proven beyond a doubt with 17,000 certified, notarized documents that not one state out of the 48 has ratified the law. They have all rejected it.

Q: Bill, thank you.

Final thoughts from interviewer Geoff Metcalf: Bill Benson claims that not a single state legally ratified the proposal to amend the Constitution in the manner required by law. According to Benson's book, "The Law That Never Was":



The federal government claims Kentucky was the second state to ratify the 16th Amendment, on Feb. 8, 1910. However, the records of the State of Kentucky show that after the Kentucky House proposed a resolution to adopt the amendment and sent it to the Senate, on Feb. 8, 1910 the Kentucky Senate voted upon that resolution, but rejected it by a vote of 9 in favor and 22 opposed. Apparently, the Kentucky Senate never did ratify that amendment. Federal officials, who had possession of documents showing this rejection, nevertheless claimed Kentucky had ratified the amendment.

In Oklahoma, the proposed amendment was passed by the Oklahoma House and the language of the resolution perfectly matched the one passed by Congress. However, the Oklahoma Senate obviously disliked what Congress had proposed, so it amended the language of the 16th Amendment in such a fashion as to have a precisely opposite meaning.

The California legislative assembly never recorded any vote upon any proposal to adopt the 16th Amendment. And whatever California did adopt bore no resemblance to what Congress had proposed. Several states engaged in the unauthorized activity of amending the language of the amendment proposed by Congress, a power that these states did not possess.

Minnesota sent nothing to the Secretary of State in Washington, but this did not deter Philander Knox from claiming that Minnesota ratified the amendment, regardless of the absence of any documentation from the State of Minnesota.

Article V of the U.S. Constitution controls the amending process, which requires that three-fourths of the states ratify any amendment proposed by Congress. In 1913, there were 48 States in the American union, so to adopt any amendment required the affirmative act of 36 states. In February 1913, Knox issued a proclamation claiming that 38 states had ratified the amendment -- including Kentucky, California and Oklahoma. But since Kentucky had rejected the amendment, California had not voted on it, and Oklahoma wanted something entirely different, the amendment was not legally adopted, the number of ratifying States being only 35. Then again, a total of 11 states failed to vote on the amendment, 33 changed the language of the amendment and Minnesota sent in nothing. In the final analysis, if the process of the adoption of the 16th Amendment is subjected to strict legal scrutiny, the amendment was never adopted.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Geoff Metcalf is a staff reporter and columnist for WorldNetDaily and is a radio talk-show host for KSFO in San Francisco.
 
Don Gwinn:

I am not a tax expert. I simply have knowledge in the area of IRS law where businesses try to falsely claim that employees are “self-employed.” I wouldn’t try to explain the difference between these various areas listed in your question, but in another post within this thread I quote a professor in tax law who says that IBT is “clearly wrong”, and that “This is slam-dunk territory. The church has no argument.” I also have personal knowledge of the requirements that must be met for an individual to be a “minister.” This knowledge has been communicated to me by experts in the respective fields. IBT's action was illegal in that it violated both the laws regulating who is self-employed and who is a minister.

Pax,

viator
 
TheBluesMan wrote:
So what you are saying is that the government (through the law) determines who is and is not a minister in churches all across the land. Right? And you don't have the slightest problem with that? Sounds like governmental control to me. I know that it is the law, but that doesn't make it right.


I respond:
To the first two questions: Yes and no. Then, to the following questions: No. Yes, to me too. Yes, it is right.

“Yes and no.” Pastors, or “ministers” receive tax benefits that others do not. If there were not regulations on who is a minister, then many people would claim to be one. So, for tax purposes, the IRS determines who is a minister. I respond “No”, in that the Lord alone determines who His true ministers are.

“No.” I don’t have the slightest problem when, for income tax purposes, the government determines who qualifies for certain benefits. This is not to be considered an affirmation of the income tax system, for I am not in favor of either special benefits for one class over another, or, even an income tax in general.

“Yes.” It is governmental control. Anarchy is a bad thing. Lawlessness is a bad thing. God is a God of order.

“Yes” it is right. Now, I don’t know in what sense you are using “right”, but it doesn’t matter, because it is right morally, ethically, and legally. You can change the laws legally. But it must be done through the system provided.


Finally, TheBluesMan wrote:
One other thought: Where the hell is the ACLU in all of this?

I respond:
I dunno, where ALL the experts are. Usually they come out of the woodwork to be seen and heard on TV. Do you think that they aren’t involved because no constitutional rights have been violated?

Pax,

viator
 
Viator,

It is a distinct possibility. I guess my mind is still open on the whole thing, but the very idea of armed federal troopers confiscating a church irritates me on a very deep, personal level, regardless of the laws of men.

Thank you for sharing your opinion, and responding so thoughtfully and thoroughly.

-Dave

P.S. Good screen name!
 
TheBluesMan:

Armed federal officers confiscating a church is unsettling also to me. I’m sorry that it ever happened. Frank Anderson was the Federal Marshal in charge of the operation. He made the best of a bad situation. Not one weapon was unholstered. The senior Pastor Dixon, who is not often praised for moderation in speech, is quoted in yesterday's Star: “Frank Anderson has shown tremendous restraint,” he said, moments after the marshals hauled him out of the temple on a gurney. “Frank Anderson has shown tremendous kindness, and we appreciate this.”

I heard Anderson say that he saw no need for any weapons to be drawn because this was a civil case, and that he was not after some felon. There was a massive show of force. But in my opinion, to do otherwise would have been foolish. There had been real threats of violence. Any law official who didn’t take that into consideration would have been derelict.

Thanks for the complement on my screen name. You are the first to mention it and I’ve used it for quite a while now. A Latin scholar in our midst, I’m impressed!

viator
 
Actually what it comes down to with IBT is they failed/refused to file the correct paper work. My church does the PRECISE same thing as IBT but filled out several forms per individual. The IRS was happy and went away.

IBT did not fill out these tax forms and as such, even though all the taxes have been paid and only Dixon himself is in any personal tax trouble, the IRS went nuts. It is ALL about the number and type of papers signed when and by whom. Period.

Also, as for the timing and how long it takes to "get thru the court system", it took long enough to acrue a total 6 million dollar tax "debt". Coincidentally the value of the property siezed is...drum roll please...six million dollars. Also this time spent dragging the issue out allowed the church to pay a large bank loan down to under 700k. Isn't that convenient.

Too bad Dixon sent all the militia and supporters home. They kept the Feds at bay. I really think he was simply tired of the whole fiasco. Anyway, expect to see many more of these events in the next year or two. There are many independent churches out there doing the same thing and thousands more like mine who toe the very edge of the law. Once the Feds see how well this worked they'll go for the others...and change the law to go for churches like mine as well.

1984 is a few years late but it'll get here. Don't you worry.
 
2nd Ammendment wrote:
Also, as for the timing and how long it takes to "get thru the court system", it took long enough to acrue a total 6 million dollar tax "debt". Coincidentally the value of the property siezed is...drum roll please...six million dollars. Also this time spent dragging the issue out allowed the church to pay a large bank loan down to under 700k. Isn't that convenient.

I respond:
Here are the facts.

The property is not worth $6 million dollars. It is in a bad part of town. No one will ever pay that much for it. Everyone I know in Indianapolis who is knowledgeable regarding real estate just laughed when they heard the $6 million appraisal. I am chuckling now at the thought of it. The Federal Government will never recover all of the money owed it.


Now, as to the legal timetable:

1983 – IBT stopped paying their employee’s withholding- something that had been done for decades- and suddenly declared that every employee was a “minister.”

1994- IRS filed liens totaling penalties and interest, alleging that IBT failed to pay payroll and SS taxes for more than a decade for its staff members. The Church leaders said that everyone who worked in the Church was a self-employed minister who was paid love gifts, not wages.

1996- IRS seized 20 acres of property near Geist Reservoir. That’s about 20 miles or so from where the church building was located.

1998- Gov. sued IBT to collect the unpaid withholding taxes.

1999- A US District Judge ruled that the temple owed $5.3 million in back taxes and interest. IBT decided to appeal.

8/14/2000- The 7th US Circuit Court of Appeals found against IBT.

9/282000- US District Judge ordered the church to vacate its property by November 14.

11/7/2000- US Supreme Court turned down a request by IBT to delay enforcement of the US District Judge who ordered US Marshals to seize the property of IBT.

1/16/2001- US Supreme Court declined to hear IBT’s appeal. This ended their legal battles.

So, them’s the facts, fellers. So much for the dragging ‘em out theory. As I said, this is just how long it takes for things to get through all of the appeals.

Pax,

viator
 
Thx for demonstrating exactly what I said. They dragged it out for an outrageous period of time. Considering the Fed can file a lien against your property and then, with the help of ATF or some other Alphabet Agency, via Asset Forfeiture sieze your property within 12 hours and never send you to trial nor charge you with a crime nor give you back your property/any compensation whatsoever, they let it drag. And don't argue with me about the above since I have personally been involved in doing exactly the above scenerio in my younger days for both taxes and drugs. It works, there's virtually no legal avenue to defend against it, and the government does it every day to the tune of billions per year.

As for the appraisal, that IS the official appraisal. We aren't debating whether the government has the slightest common sense about accepting it as reasonable, merely the fact that that is the amount which just coincidentally matches the "tax debt". A debt which, BTW, does not exist since it was paid by the individuals. (Unless, of course, it is true that the IRS refused to accept pymt, a rumor which refuses to die and which would raise a whole other world of questions.)
 
2nd Amendment,

Exactly WHO dragged the case out?

IRS? Possibly.

The Federal Judiciary? Very likely, but not from any desire to assist IRS.

If you've never seen the federal judiciary in action, it is an unwiedly, UGLY thing to behold... With each level of appeals, the process gets longer and longer.

Unfortunate, but true in a society where if you have a dollar, you have a lawyer.
 
2nd Ammendment,

The IBT dragged it out by constantly appealing. That doesn't prove your case at all; it refutes it.

viator
 
If one believes they will go straight to hell for challenging fica witholding policies, it is perhaps easier to view confiscation of church property as a mere slap on the wrist. Concepts like proportionality (the punishment fits the crime?) become easier to distort. Worship, on the religious side, in some ways resembles absolutism, on the secular. Should we respect law, as a creation of man, or genuflect before it? Hmmmmm....
 
hammer4nc:

We must distinguish between the Kingdom of the Left, government, and the Kingdom of the Right, the Church. Confiscation of property is not a slap on the wrist compared to hell. They are punishments levied in differing realms. Confiscation of property sometimes occurs when one breaks the laws established by the government. That is a temporal punishment. But transgressions in the temporal realm are also punished in the eternal realm. Yes, transgression of even the smallest of laws makes one worthy of eternal wrath. This understood, one can understand the need for forgiveness. That is God’s answer to our sin, our inability to faithfully keep the law, whether it be God's or man's.

The secular punishment for transgressing the law of the land is wielded by the courts. If you disagree with the punishments that the legislature instructs the courts to levy, then work to change the laws.

Laws are created by governments which have been established by God for the good of man. We are not to worship these laws. We are to obey them or receive the punishment for wrongdoing.

viator
 
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