Signs say IRS targeted tea party
By STEVE HUNTLEY
February 10, 2014 4:44PM
Cleta Mitchcell (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
Updated: March 12, 2014 6:14AM
President
Barack Obama maintains there’s “not even a smidgen of corruption” in the
Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of tea party and conservative
groups, that it was just the result of “bone-headed decisions” by
low-level IRS technocrats.
But testimony at a
congressional hearing last week raised red flags about IRS abuse of
conservatives that should trouble Americans no matter what their
political leanings.
When the IRS revelations
broke, Obama promised a full investigation. Yet Cleta Mitchell, an
attorney for a number of tea party and conservative groups targeted by
the IRS, testified, “None of my clients have received a single contact
from the FBI, the DOJ [Department of Justice] or any other investigator
regarding the IRS scandal.”
She detailed for a House
oversight subcommittee several areas worthy of criminal investigation
into the taxman’s singling out conservative groups for special scrutiny
and intrusive questioning regarding their nonprofit tax status.
In 2012, then IRS
commissioner Doug Shulman told Congress there had been no targeting of
tea party groups even though we now know it had been going on since
2009. “The last time I checked, lying to Congress is a felony,” Mitchell
said.
Confidential donor
information about several conservative groups, including the National
Organization for Marriage, the Texas Public Policy Foundation and the
Republican Governors Public Policy Council, were leaked to their
political foes or the public. “That is a crime,” she noted.
And Mitchell pointed to the
elephant in the room in the IRS controversy: former IRS executive Lois
Lerner invoking her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination
before the same subcommittee. “She apparently knows of criminal acts
involved in this scandal.”
Also testifying was one of
Mitchell’s clients, Catherine Engelbrecht, owner of a small Texas
manufacturing firm who organized two non-profits, one of them True the
Vote.
In running a business for
two decades, she had never been investigated by the federal government.
But since the beginning of her political activism in 2010, “my private
business, my nonprofit organizations, and family have been subjected to
more than 15 instances of audit or inquiry by federal agencies.” Those
include the IRS, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the
Bureau of Alcohol and Firearms, and the FBI.
I guess the administration wants us to believe that is all coincidence.
The top Democrat on the
panel, Elijah Cummings, tried to discredit Engelbrecht by accusing True
the Vote of sending poll watchers to minority districts. Engelbrecht
said her group only trains election volunteers and doesn’t send them
anywhere.
Conservatives are outraged
that the mainstream media and many civil rights groups swallow hook,
line and sinker the White House position that the IRS is a “phony
scandal.”
It is unimaginable that IRS
special scrutiny of liberal groups during a Republican administration
would be written off as bureaucratic bungling.
To many conservatives,
Obama’s assertion of “not even a smidgen of corruption” sounds a lot
like another White House’s claim that Watergate was “a third-rate
burglary.”
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