4b. Tax law asks questions about finances and other things relevant to how much tax you owe.
The Cato institute article I linked earlier dealt with the IRS, the 4th amendment, and their summons power. According to the article, the IRS can summons just about anything for the civil side of their tax investigations. Their summons for a criminal proceeding do have to follow the 4th. However, the IRS evidently gets an extreme amount of leeway in determining what is and isn't civil. (At least according to the article which does appear to have a bias on the topic)
The Constitution does not prohibit a search without a warrant. The Constitution protects us against unreasonable searches. All sorts of searches under various circumstances are permissible without warrants.
And the Supreme Court has said that warrantless searches are per se unreasonable. Right before they said there are a few specifically established and well delineated exceptions.
jason_iowa said:
It's auto populated as no so you can not leave it blank. It also has the required * beside it.
Where did you fill out this auto populated e-form? (as you said it was auto populated, I'm assuming it was an electronic form on a computer?) Was it at the courthouse? If so, was there a uniformed or otherwise-obvious (badge, ID, etc.) court officer watching over the group of you filling out this form? Did you feel like you could leave without filling out the form?
Boyd v. United States - 116 U.S. 616 (1886) says:
It does not require actual entry upon premises and search for and seizure of papers to constitute an unreasonable search and seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment; a compulsory production of a party's private books and papers to be used against himself or his property in a criminal or penal proceeding, or for a forfeiture, is within the spirit and meaning of the Amendment.
It is equivalent to a compulsory production of papers to make the nonproduction of them a confession of the allegations which it is pretended they will prove.
Which seems to mean the government can't force you to bring a receipt for your firearm (barring firearms specific things like 4473 forms etc.) if they can't search for, and then seize the receipt themselves via a warrant. Is this accurate?
In Silverthorne Lumber Co., Inc. v. United States - 251 U.S. 385 (1920)
The proposition could not be presented more nakedly. It is that, although, of course, its seizure was an outrage which the Government now regrets, it may study the papers before it returns them, copy them, and then may use the knowledge that it has gained to call upon the owners in a more regular form to produce them;
Which seems to mean that a reproduction is subject to more or less the same restrictions as the original.
In KYLLO V. UNITED STATES (99-8508) 533 U.S. 27 (2001)
190 F.3d 1041, reversed and remanded.
(Which may be of further interest to interest to
Spats McGee in the vein of Katz and physical vs non)
This case presents the question whether the use of a thermal-imaging device aimed at a private home from a public street to detect relative amounts of heat within the home constitutes a “search” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
And
In Silverman, for example, we made clear that any physical invasion of the structure of the home, “by even a fraction of an inch,” was too much, 365 U.S., at 512, and there is certainly no exception to the warrant requirement for the officer who barely cracks open the front door and sees nothing but the nonintimate rug on the vestibule floor. In the home, our cases show, all details are intimate details, because the entire area is held safe from prying government eyes.
And "Do you or anyone in your household possess a fire arm? Yes/No" certainly crosses into that "entire area" "held safe from prying government eyes".
Edit for Spats: Yeah that's most of where I've been looking. That Cato aticle started me down that path, and it's got dusty memory in the back of my mind trying to come to the surface but I can't remember enough of it yet to get a good search query. Something about a guy getting charged in State Court for income reported to the IRS for some money making activity illegal in his state, maybe gambling. I remember he claimed a 5th amendment violation, and lost, because he could have refused to report the source, but since he did it was somehow deemed voluntary. I have to keep thinking about it to remember more.