View Full Version : Ex-IRS agent who says we don't have to file federal income taxes ACQUITTED of fraud


neils7147933
06-24-2005, 09:05 AM
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=44956

Tax activist wins
in federal court
Ex-IRS agent says Congress has no power to collect levy on income

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: June 23, 2005
6:30 p.m. Eastern

© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

Joseph Banister
A former IRS agent who believes citizens are not required to pay federal income taxes was acquitted today on charges he attempted to defraud the government.

Joseph Banister, a Certified Public Accountant in San Jose, Calif., had been telling his clients they don't need to file federal income tax returns because the 16th Amendment, which gives Congress "power to lay and collect taxes on incomes," was never properly ratified.


A leading figure in the "tax honesty" movement, Banister was taken into custody Nov. 19 by IRS agents and released on $25,000 bond after pleading not guilty.

A jury in the U.S. District Court in Sacramento found him not guilty on a charge of conspiracy and on all three counts of aiding and assisting the filing of false tax returns for a client.

Banister's attorney, Robert Bernhoft, told WorldNetDaily the result has no direct bearing on the legitimacy of the 16th Amendment, but he insisted the implications are bigger than the issue of taxes.

"The outcome shows that average, law-abiding, hard-working citizens are not going to criminalize speech -- they're not going to send a man to prison for asking the federal government serious questions about a serious subject," he said.

Last fall, IRS spokesman Anthony Burke insisted Banister's arguments against the federal income tax already had been thoroughly vetted.

"Many constitutional or legal arguments have been tried in the courts, and without fail, they have been held to be without merit," he told WND.

Banister's website offers a defense of his views, including an 85-page report titled "Investigating The Federal Income Tax: A Preliminary Report." Website: http://www.freedomabovefortune.com/

The federal indictment accused Banister and co-defendant Walter A. Thompson, of Redding, Calif., of conspiring to defraud the United States of approximately $259,669 in income and employment taxes. In a separate trial, Thompson was acquitted of conspiracy and found guilty on charges unrelated to Banister.

If Banister had been convicted of all counts, he could have been sentenced to 14 years in prison and a fine of $1 million.

Banister left public practice as a CPA in 1993 to become an armed, criminal investigator in the IRS Criminal Investigation Division. But he says he resigned after six years because he was "unable to resolve conflicts" between the way the IRS administered the federal income tax and his oath of office.

As WorldNetDaily reported in March 2004, Banister claimed the IRS was illegally using "enforcers" to monitor his political activities and build its case against him. The IRS filed a complaint March 19, 2003, and began what he calls the agency's "mission to silence and discredit me."


In 1996, while working for the IRS, Banister says his view of tax law was jolted when he heard radio talk host Geoff Metcalf interview activist Devvy Kidd on KSFO in San Francisco.

After receiving information from Kidd, Banister used his spare time over two-and-a-half years to compile a report for his superiors, telling them that if they cannot find anything wrong with his analysis, he would have to resign.

Banister said his superiors refused to respond to his report and told him they would facilitate his resignation.

neils7147933
06-24-2005, 09:06 AM
More here:

http://joebanister.blogspot.com/

PBDS
06-24-2005, 10:52 AM
...Hey Neils, give it a try and let us know how it comes out.

masterdirector
06-24-2005, 12:42 PM
If they don't know you're making the income...hehehe, it works like a charm...or so I've heard.

**** the government for taking income tax. And property tax, and other stupid taxes. One that is really ridiculous is like a gift tax. Like if you win the lottery, you have to give 49 percent to the government. If that's the case, they should pay for 49 percent of your lottery tickets that you buy.

When I'm rich enough, I'll leave the US and buy my own 3rd world country. Have no taxes. I'll just sit on my money in my own country. And I'll just have sales tax to pay in other countries. Oh and we'll borrow a ****load of money from the US and England, which I'll pocket, then the US and England will eventually just forgive it all when they realize I'm never going to pay it back.

neils7147933
06-24-2005, 04:15 PM
...Hey Neils, give it a try and let us know how it comes out.
The first year I don't qualify for a refund, I'll take you up on that...

PBDS
06-24-2005, 04:34 PM
The first year I don't qualify for a refund, I'll take you up on that...


....What's a refund???

neils7147933
01-26-2007, 12:57 AM
Some one else is trying it now:

<img src="http://infowars.net/pictures/jan07/250107EdBrowndigsin2.jpg">

Tax Protester Exposes Federal Government Fraud

Alex Jones was joined on air yesterday (MP3) by Ed Brown to discuss his ongoing case to fight charges of tax evasion. Mr Brown and his wife have not filed or paid federal income taxes since 1997, citing the fact that there is no law that stipulates American citizens have to pay income taxes. Prosecutors claim (based upon arbitrary figures provided by the IRS) that the couple "owes" $625,000 in taxes. A jury agreed in court on Thursday the 18th of January.

<a href="http://infowars.net/articles/january2007/250107Brown.htm">http://infowars.net/articles/january2007/250107Brown.htm</a>