I'm an official IRS Whistleblower and the plaintiff in a significant case now before the US Tax Court, Jacobson v. Commissioner of the IRS, Docket 8447-13W. I'm suing the IRS for its complicity in a major tax-exempt/political scandal that far eclipses the trivial "Tea Party scandals" that the President (stupidly) and the press (compliantly) have glommed onto.
I allege, for example, that the IRS improperly awarded the corporate taxpayer in this case tax-exempt status on false premises, under duress by the taxpayer's giant law firm; and that its actual purpose was to raise funds for the Republican capture of the House in the 2010 midterm elections, for which it was wildly successful.
I further allege that the taxpayer, a shell corporation organized by the State Department and strong commercial interests, may have been a conspiracy as defined by the RICO Act, that both multinational corporate contributions and Chinese Government money were used in the 2010 elections, and that felony violations of the Tax Code, the Federal Election Act, and the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) were committed.
And that it could happen all over again, unless the IRS is held accountable.
You can read about this case here: "Whistleblower takes IRS to Court, Alleges Agency's 'Blind Eye' to Prototype Tax-Exempt Tax Frauds," http://www.prlog.org/....
This trial (no date set as yet) will make new law, establishing the jurisdiction of the US Tax Court as more than just adjudicating tax disputes, and I hope, restoring the IRS to its former role as impartial administrator of the Tax Code, especially when evaluating claims of seemingly innocuous, but politically poisonous, so-called tax-exempt 501(c)3 and 501(c)4 organizations. I welcome your comments AFTER you have read the press release.