HomeMy WebLinkAbout927860
HOPKINS RODEN CROCKETT
HANSEN & HOOPES, PLLC
Gregory L. Crockett, ISBN 1640
Lance J. Schuster, WSBN 6-4142
428 Park Avenue
P. O. Box 51219
Idaho Falls, Idaho 83405-1219
Telephone: 208-523-4445
Attorneys for Plaintiff
FIµO
OOO~60
BY
, :
MAR , 2007
S~NDRA L. HAWKES
CLERK OF CI~C:U!ï COURT
3rd JUDiCIAL DI~jnilCT
LINCOLN COUNTY, STATE OF WYOMINQ
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE
STATE OF 'WYOMING, n~ AND FOR THE COUNTY OF LINCOLN
KEY LINE AUTOMOTIVE
WAREHOUSE, INC.
Case No. CV-2007-2
Plaintiff,
ABSTRACT
vs.
Defendant.
RECEIVED 3/26/2007 at 1 :37 PM
RECEIVING # 927860
BOOK: 652 PAGE: 260
JEANNE WAGNER
LINCOLN COUNTY CLERK, KEMMERER, WY
KEVIN BRUNKHARDT d/b/a SILVER
CREEK AUTOMOTIVE,
I hereby certify that on the d day of March, 2007, a Judgment was entered in
the above-entitled cause by which the Defendant, KEVIN BRUNKHARDT d/b/a SILVER
CREEK AUTOMOTIVE, was ordered to pay to the Plaintiff, KEY LINE AUTOMOTIVE
WAREHOUSE, INC., a total Judgment of THREE THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED TWENTY-
SEVEN and 61/100THS DOLLARS ($3,927.61), together with interest at the rate of 10% per
cent per annum :£rom and after March d, 2007, until paid in full.
DATED this ~ day of March, 2
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ABSTRACT OF JUDGMENT - 1
I' "~1~.J~t)1
RECEIVED 3/26/2007 at 1 :48 PM
RECEIVING # 927863
BOOK: 652 PAGE: 261
JEANNE WAGNER
LINCOLN COUNTY CLERK, KEMMERER, WY
above line for County Clerk use
PUBLIC AFFIDAVIT of Maurice Wayne Jones, publicly notifying the world of his
beliefs regarding specific conclusions of law.
PUBLIC NOTICE
This memorandum will be construed to comply with provisions necessary to establish
presumed fact (Rule 301, Federal Rules of Evidence, and attending State rules) should
interested parties fail to rebut any given allegation or matter of law addressed herein. The
position will be construed as adequate to meet requirements of iudicial notice. thus
preserving fundamental law. Matters addressed herein, if not rebutted, will be construed to
have general application. A true and correct copy of this Public Notice is on file with and
available for inspection at the County Clerk's Office, Lincoln County Courthouse,
Kemmerer, Wyoming, which has recorded this Affidavit as legal notice. This
memorandum addresses the character of the Internal Revenue Service and other agencies
of the Department of the Treasury; and legal application of the Internal Revenue Code.
DISCLAIMER
The following infonnation was obtained from various sources and Maurice Wayne Jones,
aka Maury Jones, believes them to be true and correct. The accuracy of the citations within
this document are presently being reviewed by competent counsel at law to see that they
are true and complete representations of the law.
The memorandum is not intended to be exhaustive, but merely sufficient to support causes
set out separately. The most conspicuous conclusions oflaw contained herein are;
I.) that Congress never created a Bureau of Internal Revenue, the predecessor of the
Internal Revenue Service; and
II.) that Subtitles A & C of the Internal Revenue Code prescribe excise taxes,
mandatory only for employees of United States Government agencies; and
III.) that the Internal Revenue Service, within the geographical United States where the
Service appears to have colorable authority, is required to use judicial process prior to
seizing or encumbering assets; and
IV.) that the law demonstrates that people of thè several States, defined in the Code as
"nonresident aliens" of the self-interested United States in the Internal Revenue Code,
cannot legitimately elect to be taxed or treated as "citizens" or "residents" of the
United States; and
V.) that if a Citizen of one of the several States works for an agency of the United
States federal government or receives "taxable income" from a United States "trade
or business" (legally and narrowly defined in the IRS Code) or is otherwise effectively
connected with the United States, the employer or other third party responsible for
Page 1 of 19
~62
payment is made liable for withholding taxes at a certain percent (%) depending on
classification, and is thus "the person liable" and may be subject to Internal Revenue
Service initiatives, with administrative initiatives, where seizure and/or encumbrance
actions are concerned, subject to judicial determination by courts of competent
jurisdiction.
VI.) Misapplication of Authority of 1040 Forms and Notice of Levy is commonly used
by IRS
VII.) Liability for taxes Depends on a Taxing Statute and Notice by the Secretary as
codified in law
VIII.) The Necessity of Administrative Process is vital
IX.) The Impossibility of Effective Contract/Election into becoming "a person liable"
for federal tax or benefits therefrom
Summary and Conclusion
PRESENTATION OF FACTS:
I.) Congress never created a Bureau of Internal Revenue,
the predecessor of the Internal Revenue Service
IRS Identity & Principal of Interest
In 1953, the Internal Revenue Service was created by the stroke of a pen when the
Secretary of the Treasury changed the name of the Bureau ofInternal Revenue (T.O. No.
150-29, G.M. Humphrey, Secretary of the Treasury, July 9, 1953). However, no
congressional or presidential authorization for making this change has been located, so the
source of authority had to originate elsewhere. Research to which it is believed that IRS
officials have acquiesced suggests that the Secretary exercised his authority as trustee of
Puerto Rico Trust #62 (Internal Revenue) (see 31 USC § 1321), and, as will be
demonstrated, the Secretary does, in fact, operate as Secretary of the Treasury, Puerto
Rico.
The solid link between the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of the Treasury,
Puerto Rico, was first published in the September 1995 issue ofVeritas Magazine, based
on research by William Cooper and Wayne Bentson, both of Arizona. In October, a
criminal complaint was filed in the office ofW.A. Drew Edmondson, attorney general for
Oklahoma, against an Enid-based revenue officer, and in the time since, IRS principals
have failed to refute the allegation that IRS is an agency of the Department of Treasury,
Puerto Rico. In November, criminal complaints were filed simultaneously with the grand
jury for the United States district court for the District of Northern Oklahoma, Tulsa and
the office of Attorney General Edmondson, and both the office of the United States
Attorney and IRS principals have yet to rebut the allegations in that instance (UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA vs. Kenney F. Moore, et al. 95 CR-129C). By consulting the
index for Chapter 3, Title 31 of the United States Code, one finds that IRS and the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms are not listed as agencies of the United States
Department of the Treasury. The fact that Congress never created a "Bureau ofInternal
Revenue" is confirmed by publication in the Federal Register at 36 F.R. 849-890 [C.B.
1971 - 1.698], 36F.R. 11946 [C.B.1971-2.577], and 37 F.R. 489-490; and in Internal
Page 2 of 19
Q.{ U~;ti.tJ
Revenue Manual 1100 at 1111.2.
Implications are condemning to both IRS and third parties who knowingly participate in
IRS-initiated scams: No legitimate authority resides in or emanates from an office which
was not legitimately created and/or ordained either by state or national constitutions or by
legislative enactment. See variously. United States v. Germane, 99 U.S. 508 (1879),
Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U.S. 425, 441, 6 S.Ct. 1121 (1866), etc., dating to Pope v.
Commissioner, 138 F.2d 1006, 1009 (6th Cir. 1943); where the state is concerned, the most
recent corresponding decision was State v. Pinckney, 276 N.W.2d 433,436 (Iowa 1979).
Another direct evidence of fraud is found at 27 CFR § 1, which prescribes basic
requirements for securing permits under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act. The
problem here is that Congress promulgated the Act in 1935 and the same year the United
States Supreme Court declared the Act unconstitutional. Administration of the Act was
subsequently moved offshore to Puerto Rico, along with the Federal Alcohol
Administration, and operation eventually merged with the Bureau of Internal Revenue,
Puerto Rico, which until 193 8, along with the Bureau ofInternal Revenue, Philippines, was
created by the Philippines provisional government via Philippines Trust #2 (internal
revenue see 31 USC § 1321 for listing of Philippines Trust #2 internal revenue), and
administered the China Trade Act (licensing & revenue collection relating to opium,
cocaine, & citric wines).
This line will be resumed after examining additional evidences concerning IRS and
Commissioner of Internal Revenue authority. Further verification that IRS does not have
lawful authority in the several States is found in the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules,
beginning on page 751 of the 1995 Index volume to the Code of Federal Regulations. It
will be found that there are no regulations supportive of26 USC §§ 7621, 7801, 7802 &
7803 (these statute listings are absent from the table). In other words, no regulations have
been published in the Federal Register extending authority to the several States and the
population at large. (1) to establish revenue districts within the several States, (2) extending
authority of the Department of the Treasury [Puerto Rico] to the several States, (3) giving
authority to the Commissioner ofInternal Revenue and assistants within the several States,
or (4) extending authority of any other Department of Treasury personnel to the several
States.
Authority of the Internal Revenue Service, via the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, is
convoluted in regulations, but makes an amount of sense by citing various regulations
pertaining to the Service and application of the Commissioner's authority. General
procedural rules at 26 CFR § 601.101(a) provide a beginning-point:
(a) General. The Internal Revenue Service is a bureau of the Department of the Treasury
under the immediate direction of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The
Commissioner has general superintendence of the assessment and collection of all taxes
imposed by any law providing internal revenue. The Internal Revenue Service is the
agency by which these functions are performed..
The fact that there are no regulations extending Commissioner of Internal Revenue, or
Page 3 of 19
H8""~64
Department of the Treasury authority to the several States [26 USC § 7802(a)], has greater
clarity in the light of the general merging of functions between IRS and other agencies
presently attached to the Department of the Treasury. The Commissioner is given
responsibility for issuing rules and regulations for the Code at 26 CFR § 301.7805-1, with
approval of the Secretary, but there are no cites of authority for this CFR subpart, whether
Treasury Order, publication in the Federal Register, or even statute cite. In other words,
there is no actual or effective delegation which vests the Commissioner with significant
independent authority which might be conveyed to IRS, BATF, Customs, or any other
Department of the Treasury agency with respect to powers extending to or affecting the
several States and the population at large.
The link between IRS and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Fireanns is significant, as
the tie with the Bureau of Internal Revenue, Department of the Treasury, Puerto Rico, is
through this door. Reorganization Plan No.3 of 1940 Section 2, made the following
change:
§ 2. Federal Alcohol Administration
The Federal Alcohol Administration, the offices of the members thereof and the office of
the Administrator are abolished, and their function shall be administered under the
direction and supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury through the Bureau of Internal
Revenue in the Department of the Treasury.
Again, the Federal Alcohol Administration Act of 1935 was declared unconstitutional in
1935, and the operation thereafter transferred off shore to Puerto Rico. The name of the
Bureau ofInternal Revenue was changed to the Internal Revenue Service in 1953 (cite
above), then the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Fireanns, a division of the Internal
Revenue Service, was seemingly separated from IRS (T.O. 120-01, June 6, 1972).
In relevant part, the order reads as follows:
1. The purpose of this order is to transfer, as specified herein, the functions, powers and
duties of the Internal Revenue Service arising under law relating to Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms and Explosives including the Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms division of the
Internal Revenue Service, to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms herein after
referred to as the Bureau which is hereby established. The Bureau shall be headed by the
Director of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms herein referred to as the Director...
2. The Director shall perform the functions, exercise the powers and carry out the duties of
the Secretary and the administration and the enforcement of the following provisions of
law:
A. Chapters 51 and 52 and 53 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and Section 7652 and
7653 of such code insofar as they relate to the commodity subject to tax under such
chapters.
B. Chapter 61 to 80 inclusive to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 insofar as they relate to
activities administered and enforced with respect to chapters 51,52,53.
Page 4 of 19
U(JU;~6a
Transfer of functions and duties ofIRS to BA TF relative to Internal Revenue Code Subtitle
F (chapters 61 to 80) is important as the only regulations published in the Federal Register
applicable to the several States are under 27 CFR, Part 70 and other parts of this title
relating exclusively to alcohol, tobacco and firearms matters. However, the charade doesn't
end there. In Reorganization Plan No.1 of 1965 (5 USC § 903), the original Bureau of
Customs, created by Act of Congress in 1895, was abolished and merged under the
Secretary of the Treasury. In a Treasury Order published in the Federal Register of
December 15, 1976, the Secretary of the Treasury used something of a slight of hand to
confuse matters more by determining,
"The term Director, Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms has been replaced with the term
Internal Revenue Service. "
Obviously, it is impossible to replace a person, "Director", with a thing, "Internal Revenue
Service", when it comes to administrative responsibility. However, the order demonstrates
that IRS and BA TF are one and the same, merely operating with interchangeable hats.
Therefore, definitions and designations applicable to one are applicable to the other.
In definitions at 27 CFR § 250.11, the following provisions are found:
Revenue Agent. Any duly authorized Commonwealth Internal Revenue Agent of the
Department of the Treasury of Puerto Rico.
Secretary. The Secretary of the Treasury of Puerto Rico.
Secretary or his delegate. The Secretary or any officer or employee of the Department of
the Treasury of Puerto Rico duly authorized by the Secretary to perform the function
mentioned or described in this part.
In the absence of any other definition describing revenue officers and agents, the Secretary,
or the Department of the Treasury, definitions above are uniformly applicable to all IRS
and BA TF departments, functions and personnel. In fact, it will be found that even
petroleum tax prescribed in Subtitle D of the Internal Revenue Code applies only to United
States territorial jurisdiction exclusive of the several States and to imported petroleum.
BA TF has authority only with respect to firearms, munitions, etc., produced outside the
several States and the first sale of imports. The two delegations of authority to the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue thus far located tend to reinforce conclusions set out
above.
Treasury Department Order No. 150-42, dated July 27, 1956, appearing in at 21 Fed. Reg.
5852, specifies the following:
The Commissioner shall, to the extent of the authority vested in him, provide for the
administration of United States internal revenue laws in the Panama Canal Zone, Puerto
Rico and the Virgin Islands.
On February 27, 1986 (51 Fed. Reg. 9571), Treasury Department Order No. 150-01
specified the following:
The Commissioner shall, to the extent of authority otherwise vested in him, provide for the
administration of the United States internal revenue laws in the Us. Territories and
Page 5 of 19
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insular possessions and other authorized areas of the world
To date only three statutes in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as currently amended,
have been located that specifically reference the several States, exclusive of the federal
States (District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, etc.): 26 USC §§
5272(b), 5362(c) & 7462.
The first two provide certain exemptions to bond and import tax requirements relating to
imported distilled spirits for governments of the several States and their respective political
subdivisions, and the last provides that reports published by the United States Tax Court
will constitute evidence of the reports in courts of the United States and the several States.
None of the three statutes extend assessment or collections authority for IRS or BATF
within the several States. IRS is contracted to provide collection services for the Agency
for International Development, and case law demonstrates that the true principals of
interest are the International Monetary Fund and the Wodd Bank (Bank of the United
States v. Planters Bank of Georgia, 6 L.Ed (Wheat) 244; U.S. v. Burr, 309 U.S. 242; see 22
USCA § 286, et. seq.).
In other words, IRS seemingly provides collection services for undisclosed foreign
principals rather than collecting internal revenue for the benefit of Constitutional United
States government operation.
By the above cites it appears the Internal Revenue Service, a foreign entity with respect to
the several States, is not registered to do business in the several States.
II). Subtitles A & C of the Internal Revenue Code prescribe excise taxes, mandatory
only for employees of United States Government agencies
Preservation of Due Process Rights
The Internal Revenue Service has for years been protected by statutory courts both of the
United States and the several States, with the latter operating in the framework of adopted
uniform laws which ascribe a federal character to the several States. Both operate under the
presumption of Congress' Article IV jurisdiction within the geographical United States (the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, etc.). Both accommodate private international law
under exclusively United States treaties on private international law, and both operate in
the framework of admiralty rules to impose Civil Law (see both majority & dissenting
opinions variously, Bennis v. Michigan, U. S. Supreme Court No. 94-8729, March 4,1996),
which is repugnant to both state and national constitutions (see authority of Department of
Justice as representative of the "Central Authority" established by U.S. treaties on private
international law at 28 CFR § 0.49; also, "conflict of law" as a subcategory to "statutes" in
American Jurisprudence).
However, this house of cards will shortly fall as Cooperative Federalism, known as
Corporatism well into the 1930s, has been thoroughly documented and is rapidly being
exposed via state and United States appellate courts and in public forum. In reality, the
Page 6 of 19
v....''=.'~''/;,;b·¡
Internal Revenue Code preserves due process rights, but the statute has been dormant until
recently:
Sec. 7804(b)
(b) PRESERVATION OF EXISTING RIGHTS AND REMEDIES. - Nothing in
Reorganization Plan Numbered 26 of 1950 or Reorganization Plan Numbered 1 of 1952
shall be considered to impair any right or remedy, including trial by jury, to recover any
internal revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or
any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority, or any sum alleged to have
been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected under the internal revenue laws. For
the purpose of any action to recover any such tax, penalty, or sum, all statutes, rules, and
regulations referring to the collector of internal revenue, the principal officer for the
internal revenue district, or the Secretary, shall be deemed to refer to the officer whose act
or acts referred to in the preceding sentence gave rise to such action. The venue of any
such action shall be the same as under existing law.
The reorganization plans of 1950 & 1952 were implemented via the Internal Revenue Code
of 1954, Volume 68A of the Statutes at Large, and codified as title 26 of the United States
Code. Savings statutes have been in place since the beginning, but generally not
understood by the general population or the legal profession. The statute set out above is
easier to comprehend when references are consolidated. Further, the dependent clause
"including trial by jury" relates to a constitutionally-assured right, not a remedy, so it
should be moved to the proper location in the sentence.
Finally, the matter of venue is important as "existing law" is Constitutional and Common
Law indigenous to the several States. In the absence of legitimate federal law which
extends to the several States, those who operate under color of law, engage in oppression,
extortion, etc., are subject to the foundation law of the States, the Constitution. Venue is
determined by the law of legislative jurisdiction. Citing "including trial by jury" preserves
the full slate ofthe process rights included in Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the Constitution for the united States of America and corresponding
provisions in constitutions of the several States. The example represents the class.
Additionally, note that, (1) actions may issue against bogus assessments as well as
collections, and (2) § 7804(b), unlike § 7433, does not presume that the complaining party
is a "taxpayer". Finally, there is 26 CFR, Part 1 regulatory support for § 7804 where there
are no regulations published in the Federal Register in support of § 7433 (see Parallel Table
of Authorities and Rules, beginning on page 751 of the Index volume to the Code of
Federal Regulations). Therefore, § 7804(b) preserves rights and determines the nature of
civil actions for remedies in the several States.
When straightened out, applicable portions of § 7804(b) reads as follows: Nothing in [the
Internal Revenue Code] shall be considered to impair any right, [including trial by jury], or
remedy, to recover any internal revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally
assessed or collected... The venue of any such action shall be the same as under existing
law.
Page 7 of 19
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The necessity of due process is implicitly preserved by 28 USC § 2463, which stipulates
that any seizure under United States revenue laws will be deemed in the custody of the law
and subject solely to disposition of courts of the United States with proper jurisdiction. In
other words, even ifIRS had legitimate authority in the several States, the agency would of
necessity have to file a civil or criminal complaint prior to garnishment, seizure, or any
other action adversely affecting the life, liberty, or property of any given person, whether a
Fourteenth Amendment citizen-subject of the United States or a Citizen principal of one of
the several States.
Due process assurances in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment do not equivocate.
Administrative seizures without due process can be equated only to tyranny and barbarian
rule. Further, even regulations governing IRS conduct acknowledge and therefore preserve
Fifth Amendment assurances at 26 CFR § 601. 106(f) (1).
(1) Rule
1. An exaction by the us. Government, which is not based upon law, statutory or
otherwise, is a taking of property without due process of law, in violation of the Fifth
Amendment to the Us. Constitution. Accordingly, an Appeals representative in his or her
conclusions of fact or application of the law shall hew to the law and the recognized
standards of legal construction. It shall be his or her duty to determine the correct amount
of the tax, with strict impartiality as between the taxpayer and the Government, and
without favoritism or discrimination as between taxpayers.
Even officers, agents and employees of United States agencies are assured due process
where garnishment is concerned (5 USC § 5520a), so the notion that IRS has authority to
execute garnishment and other seizures via the private sector without due process is clearly
absurd.
In the English-American lineage, due process has always been deemed to mean trial by
jury under rules of the common law indigenous to the several States. The de jure people of
America are not subject to admiralty or administrative tribunals. Where officer, agents, and
employees of the Internal Revenue Service are concerned there can be no plea of ignorance
concerning the necessity of due process as the Handbook for Revenue Agents, at paragraph
332: (1), provides the following:
During the course of administratively collecting a tax, an occasion may arise where
service of a levy or a notice of levy is not adequate to seize the property of a taxpayer. It
cannot be emphasized too strongly that constitutional guarantees and individual rights
must not be violated. Property should not be forcibly removed from the person of the
taxpayer. Such conduct may expose a revenue officer to an action in trespass, assault and
battery, conversion, etc.
The provision acknowledges the Supreme Court decision in Larson v. Domestic and
Foreign Commerce Corp. 337 U.S. 682 (1949).
In sum, the mandate for due process, meaning initiatives through judicial courts with
proper jurisdiction, is clearly antecedent to imposition of administratively-issued liens,
except where licensing agreements obligate assets, or seizures, whether by garnishment,
Page 8 of 19
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attachment of bank accounts, administrative seizure, and/or sale of real or private property,
or any other initiative that compromises life, liberty or property.
III.) The Internal Revenue Service, within the geographical United States where the
Service appears to have colorable authority, is required to use judicial process prior
to seizing or encumbering assets
The current Internal Revenue Code & the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 are the same.
Consult 26 USC §§ 7851 & 7852 to verify that the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as
amended in 1986 and since, simply reorganized the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. Read §
7852(b) & (c), then read the balance of §§ 7851 & 7852 for best comprehension.
The importance of making this connection rests on the fact that the Internal Revenue Code
of 1939 was merely codification of the Public Salary Tax Act of 1939. There was no
general income tax levied against the population at large in 1939 or since. The Public
Salary Tax Act of 1939, which in the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 incorporated the
Social Security tax activated after 1936, was premised on the notion that working for
federal government is a privilege. Income and related taxes prescribed in Subtitles A & C
of the current Internal Revenue Code have never been mandatory for anyone other than
officers, agents, and employees ofthe United States, as identified at 26 USC § 3401(c), and
agencies of the United States, identified at § 3401 (d), particularized at 5 USC §§ 102 & 105.
The privilege tax is an excise rather than direct tax. The Sixteenth Amendment,
fraudulently promulgated in 1913, did not alter or repeal Constitutional provisions which
require all direct taxes to be apportioned among the several States (Constitution Article I
§§ 2,3, & 9.4).
In Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189 (1918), Coppage v. Kansas, 236 U.S. 1, and
numerous decisions since, the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly affinned that
for purposes of income tax, wages and other returns from enterprise of common right are
property, not income. In fact, returns from enterprise of common right are fundamental to
all property, and the sanctity is preserved as a fundamental common law principle dating to
signing of the Magna Charta in 1215.
The nature of Subtitles A & C taxes are revealed at 26 CFR § 31.3101-1:
"The employee tax is measured by the amount of wages received after 1954 with respect to
employment after 1936..."
In other words, the wage is not the object, but merely the measure of the tax. This verbiage
constitutes so much legalese in an effort to circumvent the duck test (if it looks like a duck
and quacks like a duck, it is a duck), but the fact that taxes collected by the Internal
Revenue Service fall into the excise category was confinned by the Comptroller General's
report following the initial effort to audit IRS (GAO/T-AIMD-93-3).
The above is further supported at 26 CFR § 106.401 (a)(2), where the regulation concedes,
"The descriptive terms used in this section to designate the various classes of taxes are
intended only to indicate their general character... "
Page 9 of 19
.-..,'" ","V
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By referencing the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules, cited above, it is found that the
definition of "gross income" is still preserved in Section 22 of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1939, thus cementing the link between the Code of 1939 and Subtitles A & C of the
Code of 1954, as amended in 1986 and since. The Internal Revenue Code of 1939 merely
codified the Public Salary Tax Act of 1939.
This link is further confirmed in Senate Committee on Finance and House Committee on
Ways and Means reports No. H.R. 8300 (1954, Internal Revenue Code), in which § 22 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 and § 61 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (current
code) were solidly linked. Both reports stipulate that the current definition of" gross
income" is intended to be Constitutional. This intent is articulated at 26 CFR § 1.61-1(a):
"Gross income means all income from whatever source derived, unless excluded by law. "
An "Act of Congress" is policy, not law, and per definition located in Rule 54, Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure, has only local application in the District of Columbia and
other United States territories and insular possessions unless general application is
manifestly expressed:
Rule 54(c) - "Act of congress' includes any act of Congress locally applicable to and in
force in the District of Columbia, in Puerto Rico, in a territory or in an insular possession. "
Where the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 is concerned (Vol. 68A, Statutes at Large, p. 3),
the legislation is in fact styled, "An Act" "To revise the internal revenue laws of the United
States. " As demonstrated above, wages and other returns from enterprise of common right
are exempt from direct tax by fundamental law, and the regulation for the current Internal
Revenue Code definition for "gross income" clearly articulates the fundamental law
exemption.
The exemption as it pertains to the several States is demonstrated by referencing the
Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules (Index volume to the CFR. p. 751 ofthe 1995
edition): There are 26 CFR, Part 1 regulations listed for 26 USC §§ 61 & 62, the latter
being the definition for adjusted gross income, but there is no 26 CFR, Part 1 or 31
regulations for 26 USC § 63, the definition for taxable income. While definitions for gross
and adjusted gross income are clearly antecedent to the definition of taxable income, they
have no legal effect if there is no taxing authority - adjusted gross income which is not
taxable within the several States is of no consequence where the federal tax system is
concerned. Further, on examination of26 CFR § 1.62-1, pertaining to "adjusted gross
income," it is found that subsections (a) & (b) are reserved so the published regulation is
incomplete, with "temporary" regulation § 1.62-IT serving as the current authority defining
"adjusted gross income."
Temporary regulations have no legal effect. Definitions at § 3401, Vol. 68A of the Statutes
at Large (the Internal Revenue Code of 1954), make it clear that, (§ 3401(a)(A», "a
resident of a contiguous country who enters and leaves the United States at frequent
intervals...," is a nonresident alien ofthe United States (citizens and residents of the several
States included), and the exclusion from "wages" extends even to citizens of the United
Page 10 of 19
States who provide services for employers "other than the United States or an agency
thereof' (§ 3401(a)(8)(A)).
¿~1
IV.) The law demonstrates that people of the several States cannot legitimately elect
to be taxed or treated as citizens or residents of the United States
The Employer or Agent is Liable
Volume 68A of the Statues at Large, the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, makes it perfectly
clear who is "liable" for payment of Subtitles A & C taxes:
SEe.3504. ACTS TO BE PERFOR.MED BY AGENTS: In case afiduciary agent, or other
person has the control, receipt, custody, or disposal of or pays the wages of an employee
or group of employees, employed by one or more employers, the Secretary ofhis delegate,
under regulations prescribed by him, is authorized to designate such fiduciary, agent, or
other person to perform such acts as are required by employers under this subtitle and as
the Secretary or his delegate may specify. Except as may be otherwise prescribed by the
Secretary of his delegate, all provisions of law (including penalties) applicable in respect
to an employer shall be applicable to afiduciary, agent, or other person so designated, but,
except as so provided, the employer for whom such fiduciary, agent, or other person acts
shall remain subject to the provisions of law (including penalties) applicable in respect to
employers.
The liability is further clarified at Vol. 68A. Sec. 3402(d):
(d) TAX PAID BY RECIPIENT - If the employer, in violation of the provisions of this
chapter, fails to deduct and withhold the tax under this chapter, and thereafter the tax
against which such tax may be credited is paid, the tax so required to be deducted and
withheld shall not be collected from the employer, but this subsection shall in no case
relieve the employer from liability for any penalties or additions to the tax otherwise
applicable in respect to such failure to deduct and withhold
These provisions from Vol. 68A of the Statutes at Large comply with and verify liability
set out at 26 CPR, Part 601, Subpart D in general. Further, territorial limits of application
are made clear by the absence of regulations supporting 26 USC §§ 7621, 7802, etc. which
are the statutes authorizing establishment of internal revenue districts and delegations of
authority to the Commissioner ofInternal Revenue and assistants. The fact that the liability
falls to the "employer", enumerated in 26 USC § 3401(d), and/or his agent, with no
compensation for serving as "tax collector", narrows the field to federal government
entities as "employers" if for no other reason than the population at large is not subject to
the edict of government officials. As a matter of course, government cannot compel
perfonnance where the general population is concerned. The subject class that has
"liability" for Subtitles A & C taxes is the "employer" or his agent, fiduciary, etc. as
specified above.
The matter is further clarified in Section 3401 & 3404 of Vol. 68A, Statutes at Large:
SEe. 3403. LIABILITY FOR TAX. The employer shall be liable for the payment of the tax
required to be deducted and withheld under this chapter, and shall not be liable to any
person for the amount of any such payment.
Page 11 of 19
0(. _.,... ..'2
SEC3404. RETURN AND PAYMENT BY GOVERNMENTAL EMPLOYER If the employer
is the United States, or a State, Territory, or political subdivision thereof, or the District of
Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of anyone or more of the foregoing, the return
of the amount deducted and withheld upon any wages may be made by any officer of
employee of the United States, or of such State, Territory, or political subdivision, or of the
District of Columbia, or of such agency or instrumentality, as the case may be, having
control of the payment of such wages, or appropriately designated for that purpose.
The territorial application, and limitations, is made clear by definitions in Title 26 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
§ 31.3121 (3)-1 State, United States, and citizen. (a) When used in the regulations in this
subpart, the term "State" includes the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii before their admission as
States, and (when used with respect to services performed after 1960) Guam and American
Samoa. (b) When used in the regulations in this subpart, the term "United States'~ when
used in a geographical sense, means the several states (including the Territories of Alaska
and Hawaii before their admission as States), the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. When used in the regulations in this subpart with
respect to services performed after 1960, the term "United States" also includes Guam and
American Samoa when the term is used in a geographical sense. The term "citizen of the
United States" includes a citizen of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands,
and, effective January 1, 1961, a citizen of Guam or American Samoa.
Definition of the terms "includes" and "including" located at 26 USC § 770l(c) provides
the limiting authority which the above definitions, beyond constructive applications, are
subject to:
(c) INCLUDES AND INCLUDING. - The terms "includes" and "including" when used in a
definition contained in this title shall not be deemed to exclude other things otherwise
within the meaning of the term defined.
Two principles oflaw clarify definition intent: (1) The example represents the class, and (2)
that which is not named is intended to be omitted. In the definitions of "United States" and
"State" set out above, all examples are of federal States, and are exclusive of the several
States, with the transition of Alaska and Hawaii from the included to the excluded class
proving the point. This conclusion is reinforced by the absence of regulations which extend
authority to establish revenue districts in the several States (26 USC § 7621), authority for
the Department of the Treasury [Puerto Rico] in the several States (26 USC § 7801), and no
grant of delegated authority for the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, assistant
commissioners, or other Department of the Treasury personnel (26 USC § 7802 & 7803).
v.) If a Citizen of one of the several States works for an agency of the United States
federal government or receives income from a United States "trade or business" the
employer or other third party responsible for payment is made liable for withholding
taxes and is thus "the person liable"
Page 12 of 19
"15'.' ".. "?"J'
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Lack of Regulations Supporting General Application of Tax
Here again, the Parallel Table of Authorities and Rules is useful as it demonstrates that
Subtitles A & C taxes do not have general applications within the several States and to the
population at large. The regulation for 26 USC § 1 refers to 26 CFR § 301, but that amounts
to a dead end - there is no regulation under 26 CFR Part 1 or 31 which would apply to the
several States and the population at large. Further, there are no supportive regulations at all
for 26 USC §§ 2 & 3, and of considerable significance, no regulations supporting corporate
income tax 26 USC § 11, as applicable to the several States. Where the instant matter is
concerned, regulations supporting 26 USC § 6321, liens for taxes and § 6331, levy and
distraint, are under 27 CFR, Part 70. The importance here is that Title 27 of the Code of
Federal Regulations is exclusively under Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
administration for Subtitle E and related taxes. There are no corresponding regulations for
the Internal Revenue Service, in 26 CFR, Part 1 or 31, which extend comparable authority
to the several States and the population at large regarding "income" taxes.
The necessity of regulations being published in the Federal Register is variously prescribed
in the Administrative Procedures Act, at 5 USC § 552 et seq. and the Federal Register Act,
at 44 USC § 1501 et seq. Of particular note, it is specifically set out at 44 USC § 1505(a),
that when regulations are not published in the Federal Register, application of any given
statute is exclusively to agencies of the United States and officers, agents, and employees
of the United States, thus once again confirming application of Subtitles A & C tax
demonstrated above. Further, the need for regulations is detailed in 1 CFR, Chapter 1, and
where the Internal Revenue Service is concerned 26 CFR § 601. 702.
The need for regulations has repeatedly been affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United
States as stated in California Bankers Ass'n. v. Schultz, 416 U.S. 21, 26, 94 S.Ct. 1494,
1500,39 L.Ed.2d 812 (1974):
Because it has a bearing on our treatment of some of the issues raised by the parties, we
think it important to note that the Act's civil and criminal penalties attach only upon
violation of regulations promulgated by the Secretary; if the Secretary were to do nothing,
the Act itself would impose no penalties on anyone...
The government argues that since only those who violate regulations may incur civil and
criminal penalties it is the regulations issued by the Secretary of the Treasury and not the
broad authorizing language of the statute which is to be tested against the standards ofthe
4th Amendment. Because there is a citation supporting these statutes applicable under Title
27 of the Code of Federal Regulations, it is important to point out that, "Each agency shall
publish its own regulations in full text. " 1 CFR § 21.21 (c), with further verification that one
agency cannot use regulations promulgated by another at 1 CFR § 21,40. To date, no
corresponding regulation has been found for 26 CFR, Part 1 or 31, so until proven
otherwise, IRS does not have authority to perfect liens or prosecute seizures in the several
States as pertaining to the population at large.
VI.) Misapplication of Authority of 1040 Forms and Notice of Levy
Regulations pertaining to seized property are found at 26 CFR § 601.3 26: Part 72 of Title
Page 13 of 19
'. '..:q ~~.,
"..i1~,.. 'Ult.IÞ ~ ''t
27 CFR contains the regulations relative to the personal property seized by officers of the
Internal Revenue Service or the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Fireanns as subject to
forfeiture as being used, or intended to be used, to violate certain Federal Laws; the
remission or mitigation of such forfeiture; and the administrative sale or other disposition,
pursuant to forfeiture, of such seized property other than fireanns seized under the National
Firearms Act and fireanns and ammunition seized under title 1 of the Gun Control Act of
1968. For disposal offireanns and ammunition under Title 1 of the Gun Control Act of
1968, see 18 V.S.C. 924(d). For disposal of explosives under Title XI of Organized Crime
Control Act of 1970, see 18 U.S.C. 844(c).
The only other comparable authority thus far found pertains to windfall profits tax on
petroleum (26 CFR § 601.405), but once again, application is not supported by regulations
applicable to the several States and the population at large.
Where the provision for filing 1040 returns is concerned, the key regulatory is at 26 CFR §
601.401 (d)(4), and this application appears related to "employees" who work for two or
more "employers", receiving foreign-earned income effectively connected to the United
States. The option of filing a 1040 return for refund is mentioned in instruction applicable
to United States citizens and residents of the Virgin Islands, but to date has not been
located elsewhere. Reference OMB numbers for § 601.401, listed on page 170,26 CFR,
Part 600-End, are cross referenced to Department of Treasury OMB numbers published in
the Federal Register. November 1995, for foreign application.
The fact that 1040 tax return fonns are optional and voluntary, with special application, is
further reinforced by Delegation Order 182 (reference 26 CFR §§ 301.6020-1(b) &
301.7701). The Secretary or his delegate is authorized to file a Substitute for Return for the
following Fonn 941 (Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return); Fonn 720 (Quarterly
Federal Excise Tax Return); Fonn 2290 (Federal Use Tax Return on Highway Motor
Vehicles); Fonn CT-1 (Employer's Annual Railroad Retirement Tax Return); Fonn 1065
(U.S. Partnership Return ofIncome); Fonn 11-B (Special Tax Return-Gaming Services);
Form 942 (Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return for Household Employees); and Fonn
943 (Employer's Annual Tax Return for Agricultural Employees).
The "notice of levy" instrument forwarded to various third parties is not a "levy" which
warrants surrender of property. The Internal Revenue Code, at § 6335(a), defines the
"notice" instrument by use -notice is to be served to whomever seizure has been executed
against after the seizure is effected. In short, the notice merely conveys infonnation, it is
not cause for action. The tenn "notice" is clarified by definition in Black's Law Dictionary,
6th Edition, and other law dictionaries. Use of the "notice of levy" instrument to effect
seizure is fraud by design. Proper use of the "notice" process, administrative garnishment,
et al. is specifically set out in 5 USC § 5514, as being applicable exclusively to officers,
agents and employees of agencies of the United States [26 USC § 3401(c)]. Even then,
however, the process must comply with provisions of31 USC § 3530(d), and standards set
forth in §§ 3711 & 3716-17. In accordance with provisions of26 CFRPart 601, Subpart D,
the employer, meaning the United States agency the employee is employed by, is
responsible for promulgating regulations and carrying out garnishment. Even if IRS was
Page 14 of 19
r--°O"'>7r.:
ì~~.í1 0 II. JIll '...,
the agency responsible for collecting from an "employee," due process would be required,
as noted above, so authority to collect would ensue only after securing a court order from a
court of competent jurisdiction, which in the several States would mean a judicial court of
the State. In law, however, there is no authority for securing or issuing a Notice of Distraint
premised on non-filing, bogus filing, or any other act relating to the 1040 return. See
United States v. O'Dell, Case No. 10188, Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, March 10, 1947.
In G.M. Leasing Corp. v. United States, 429 U.S. 338 (1977), the United States Supreme
Court held that a judicial warrant for tax levies is necessary to protect against unjustified
intrusions into privacy. The Court further held that forcible entry by IRS officials onto
private premises without prior judicial authorization was also an invasion of privacy.
VII. Liability Depends on a Taxing Statute and Notice by the Secretary
General demands for filing tax returns, productions of records, examination of books,
imposition and payment oftax, etc., are of no consequence to the point a taxing statute (1)
defines what tax is being imposed, and (2) the basis of liability. In other words, even if the
Internal Revenue Service was a legitimate agency of the United States Department of the
Treasury and had authority in the several States, the Service would have to be specific with
respect to what tax was at issue and would have to demonstrate the tax by citing a taxing
statute with the necessary elements to establish that any given person was obligated to pay
any given tax. This mandate has been clarified by the court numerous times, with the
matter definitively stated by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in United States v.
Community TV inc., 327 F.2d 797, at p. 800 (1964): Without question, a taxing statute
must describe with some certainty the transaction, service, or object to be taxed, and in the
typical situation it is construed against the Government, Hasset v. Welch, 303 U.S. 303, 58
S.Ct. 559,82 L.Ed. 858. In other words, to the point Service personnel produce the statute
which mandates a certain tax and which specifies "...the transaction, service, or object to be
taxed...," the burden ofprooflies with the Government, with the consequence being that no
obligation of civil or criminal liability can ensue to the point a taxing statute that meets the
above requirements is in evidence. This conclusion is supported by the statute which
provides the underlying requirements for keeping records, making statements, etc., located
at 26 USC § 6001:
Every person liable for any tax imposed by this title, or for the collection thereof, shall
keep such records, render such statements, make such returns, and comply with such rules
and regulations as the Secretary may from time to time prescribe. Whenever in the
judgement of the Secretary it is necessary, he may require any person, by notice served
upon such person, or by regulations, to make such returns, render such statements, or keep
such records, as the Secretary deems sufficient to show whether or not such person is liable
for tax under this title. The only records which an employee shall be required to keep under
this section in connection with charged tips shall be charge receipts, records necessary to
comply with section 6053(c), and copies of statements furnished by employees under
section 6053 (a).
The control statute for Subtitle F. Chapter 61, Subchapter A, Part 1, concerning records,
statements, and special returns, clearly returns the matter to the "employee" defined at §
3401(c), and the "employer" defined at § 3401 (d). In general, however, (1) the Secretary
Page 15 of19
A"\n O').....·~
'JJ ~iI ~d ( iiC)
must provide direct notice to whomever is required to keep books, records, etc., as being
the "person liable," or (2) specify the person liable by regulation. In the absence of notice
by the Secretary, based on a taxing statute which makes such a person liable according to
provisions stipulated in United States v. Community TV Inc., Hassett v. Welch, and other
such cases, or regulations which specifically establish general liability, there is no liability.
Sec. 6001 also exempts "employees" from keeping records except when tips and the like
are concerned.
This is consistent with constructive demonstration that "employers" rather than
"employees" are required to file returns, as opposed to paying deducted amounts as income
tax returns, constructively demonstrated in a previous section of this memorandum and
specifically articulated in 26 CFR § 601.104. Clarification via 26 USC § 6053(a) is as
follows:
(a) REPORTS BY EMPLOYEES - Every employee who, in the course ofhis employment by
an employer, receives in any calendar month tips which are wages (as defined in section
3121 (a) or section 3401 (a) or which are compensation (as defined in section 3231 (e)) shall
report all such tips in one or more written statements furnished to his employer on or
before the 10th day following such month. Such statements shall be furnished by the
employee under such regulations, at such other times before such 10th day, and in such
form and manner, as may be prescribed by the Secretary.
Unraveling § 6001 straightens out the meaning of § 6011, which requires filing returns,
statements, etc., by the person made liable (§ 3401 (d)), as distinguished from the person
required to make return (payments) at § 6012 (§ 3401(c)).
Even though a person might be a citizen or resident of the United States employed by an
agency of the United States, and thereby be required to return a prescribed amount of
United States-source income, he is not the person liable under § 6011 and attending
regulations. The "method of assessment" prescribed at 26 USC § 6303 is therefore
dependent on the taxing statute and must rest on authority specifically conveyed by a
taxing statute which prescribes liability where the Secretary (1 ) has provided specific
notice. including the statute and type of tax being imposed. or (2) supports assessment by
regulatory application. In the absence of one or the other. an assessment by the Secretary is
of no consequence as it is not legally obligating. The requirement for the Secretary to
provide notice to whomever is responsible for collecting tax, keeping records, etc., is
clarified at 26 CFR § 301.7512-1, particularly (a)(1)(i), relating to "employee tax imposed
by section 3101 of chapter 21 (Federal Insurance Contributions Act)," and (a)(1)(iii),
relating to "income tax required to be withheld on wages by section 3402 of chapter 24
(Collection of Income Tax at Source on Wages)..." The person liable is the employer or the
employer's agent, and of particular significance, it is this "person" who is subject to civil
and particularly criminal penalties (26 CFR § 301.7513-1(f); 26 CFR §§ 301.7207-1 &
301.7214-1, etc.). Officers and employees of the United States are specifically identified as
being liable at 26 USC § 301.7214-1. The matter of who is required to register, apply for
licenses, or otherwise collect and/or pay taxes imposed by the Internal Revenue Code is
ultimately and finally put to rest under "Licensing and Registration", 26 USC §§
301.7001-1, et seq. Each of the categories so addressed has liability based on some
Page 16 of 19
OOO~7t7
particular taxing statute which creates liability.
VIII. The Necessity of Administrative Process
The requirement for a specific taxing statute, with 26 USC § 6001 clearly providing the
first leg in necessary administrative procedure to determine liability, was addressed at
length in Rodriguez v. United States, 629 F .Supp.333 (N.D. III. 1986). Presuming (1) the
Secretary has provided the necessary notice, or (2) a regulation prescribes general
application which makes any given person liable for a tax and requires tax return
statements to be filed, each step in administrative process prescribed by 26 USC §§ 6201,
6212,6213,6303 and 6331 must be in place for seizure or any other encumbrance to be
legal. Here again, regulations published in the Federal Register are significant. with
provision of5 USC & 552 et seq. 44 USC ~ 1501 et seq., 1 CFR, Chapter L and 26 CFR,
Part 601 all supporting the mandate for regulations to be published in the Federal Register
before they have general application. It will be noted by referencing the Parallel Table of
Authorities and Rules, beginning on page 751 of the 1995 Index volume to the Code of
Federal Regulations, that application by regulation to the several States is only under Title
27 of the Code of Federal Regulations, or that there are no regulations published in the
Federal Register. The following entries, or non-entries, are found: 26 USC § 6201
Assessment authority 27 CFR, Part 70 26 USC § 6212 Notice of deficiency No Regulation
26 USC § 6213 Restrictions applicable to deficiencies petition to Tax Court No Regulation
26 USC § 6303 Notice and Demand for Tax 27 CFR, Part 53, 70 26 USC § 6331 Levy and
distraint 27 CFR, Part 70
The assessment authority under 26 USC § 6201, in relevant part as applicable to Subtitles
A & C taxes, are as follows:
(a) AUTHORITY OF SECRETARY - The Secretary is authorized and required to make the
inquiries, determination, and assessments of all taxes (including interest, additional
amounts, additions to the tax, and assessable penalties) imposed by this title, or accruing
under any former internal revenue law, which have been duly paid by stamp at the time and
in the manner provided by law. Such authority shall extend to and include the following:
(1) TAXES SHOWN ON RETURN - The secretary shall assess all taxes determined by the
taxpayer or by the Secretary as to which returns or lists are made under this title.
(3) ERRONEOUS INCOME TAX PREPAYMENT CREDITS - !fon any return or claim for
refund of income taxes under subtitle A there is an overstatement of the credit for income
tax withheld at the source, or of the amount paid as estimated income tax, the amount
overstated which is allowed against the tax shown on the return or which is allowed as a
credit or refund may be assessed by the Secretary in the same manner as in the case of a
mathematical or clerical error appearing upon the return, except that the provision of
section 6231 (b)(2) (relating to abatement of mathematical or clerical error assessments)
shall not apply with regard to any assessment under this paragraph.
(b) AMOUNT NOT TO BE ASSESSED. - (1) ESTIMATED INCOME TAX - No unpaid
amount of estimated income tax required to be paid under section 6654 or 6655 shall be
assessed. (2) FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT TAX - No unpaid amount of Federal
unemployment tax for any calendar quarter or other period of a calendar year, computed
as provided in section 6157, shall be assessed.
Page 17 of 19
00027S
(d) DEFICIENCY PROCEEDINGS - For special rules applicable to deficiencies of income,
estate, gift, and certain excise taxes, see subchapter B. The grant of assessment authority
with respect to taxes prescribed in Subtitles A & C is limited to provisions set out above
even where the Service might have authority relating to those made liable for the tax,
meaning the "employer" spec((ìed at 26 USC § 3401 (d).
Clearly, returns made either by the agent of the United States agency required to file a
return, or the Secretary, are to be evaluated mathematically, and errors are to be treated as
clerical errors, nothing more. The Secretary has no authority to assess estimated income tax
(individual estimated income tax at § 6554; corporation estimated income tax at § 6655), or
unemployment tax (§ 6157). For all practical purposes, the trail effectively ends here.
IX. The Impossibility of Effective Contract/Election
In order for there to be an opportunity for a "nonresident alien" of the United States (a
Citizen of one of the several States) to elect to be taxed or treated as a "citizen" or
"resident" of the United States, one or the other of a married couple, or the single
"individual" making the election, must be a "citizen" or "resident" of the United States (26
USC § 6013(g)(3)).
Some party must in some way be connected with a "United States trade or business"
(performance of the function of a public office [26 USC § 7701(a)(26)]. A nonresident
alien never has self-employment income [26 CFR § 1.1402(b )-1 (d)] nor is liable for
collection and payment of income tax (26 CFR § 1.1441-1). And in order for real property
to be treated as effectively connected with a "United States trade or business" by way of
election, it must be located within the geographical United States (26 USC § 871(d)).
Provision cited above preclude any and all legal authority for Citizens ofthe several States,
or privately owned enterprise located in the several States, to participate in federal tax and
benefits programs prescribed in Subtitles A & C of the Internal Revenue Code and
companion legislation such as the Social Security Act which provide benefits from the
United States Government, which is a foreign corporation to the several States.
Summary & Conclusion
The memorandum is not intended to be exhaustive, but merely sufficient to support causes
set out separately. The most conspicuous conclusions of law are:
1. Congress never created a Bureau of Internal Revenue, the predecessor of the Internal
Revenue Service;
2. Subtitles A & C of the Internal Revenue Code prescribe excise taxes, mandatory only
for employees of United States Government agencies;
3. The Internal Revenue Service, within the geographical United States where the Service
appears to have colorable authority, is required to use judicial process prior to seizing or
encumbering assets;
4. The law demonstrates that people of the several States, defined as nonresident aliens of
the self-interested United States in the Internal Revenue Code, cannot legitimately elect to
be taxed or treated as citizens or residents of the United States. If a Citizen of one of the
Page 18 of 19
000279
several States works for an agency of the United States or receives income from a United
States "trade or business" or otherwise effectively connected with the United States, the
employer or other third party responsible for payment is made liable for withholding taxes
at a celiain percentage rate set by Congress, depending on classification, and is thus "the
person liable" and may be subject to Internal Revenue Service initiatives, with
administrative initiatives, where seizure and/or encumbrance actions are concerned,
subject to judicial detennination by courts of competent jurisdiction.
AFFIDA VIT
I, Maurice Wayne Jones, hereby declare and affinn, as God is my witness, that the above
Affidavit of Belief is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and that all matters of
law and fact presented herein are accurate and true. Under penalties of perjury, per 28 USC
§ 1746(1), I attest that the signature immediately below is my legal and lawful signature.
11/~tJ~ ~a;
by: Maurice Wayne Jones, aka M'aury Jones
?1ta~ ¡f~_
/
Notary Statement
state of Wyoming
)
)
)
SS
county of Lincoln
Before me, the undersigned authority, on this day personally appeared Maurice Wayne
Jones, also known as Maury Jones, known to me or proved to be the natural person whose
name is subscribed to in the foregoing, and acknowledged to me that he executed the same
for the purposes herein expressed.
Affiant is:
tA personally known to me, or
[j has produced identification. ID#:
Given under my hand and seal and executed on this
~~tYì
day of March, 2007.
Notary Signature UM1 't\f\Q)\ L~
seal:
HEATHER WARREN
County of
Lincoln
My Commission Ex~ires December 15. 2010
State of
Wyoming
Notary Public for the State of
w yö W\ \'n.C\
I \
\ ~ - \ C8 - ~ (j lD
NOTARY PUBLIC
My Commission Expires:
Page 19 of 19