Secret emails to finally nail Obama in major scandal? GOP Senate demands all communications with IRS
The new GOP majority in the U.S. Senate is turning up the heat on its investigation of allegations the Internal Revenue Service shared private taxpayer information with President Obama, demanding Obama turn over communications he and his staff had with the agency.
The
Washington Times reported it obtained a
copy of a letter signed by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Orrin Hatch,
R-Utah, and the 13 other Republicans on the panel.
Addressed to Obama, the letter asks for his communications
with the IRS since 2010 for their investigation into whether the agency has
been engaging in illegal distribution of private taxpayer information.
Republicans have accused the Obama administration of using the IRS as a
political weapon since discovering the agency obstructed the applications for
tax-exempt status of conservative organizations critical of Obama’s policies.
The letter said: “We have an obligation to conduct oversight
of the federal government’s administration of our tax laws. As part of this
oversight, we are seeking to determine the degree to and manner in which the
Internal Revenue Service shares taxpayer information with the executive office of
the president.”
IRS documents filed by the National Organization for
Marriage, for example, were released to a citizen who asked for them, and they
ended up in the hands of a homosexual activist who posted the confidential
information online.
A judge ruled the IRS simply made a mistake, but the agency
agreed to pay the group $50,000.
The documents requested by the Senate panel were also
requested by the interest group Cause of Action, which has gone to court to try
to compel the IRS inspector general to turn them over, the Times reported. The
inspector general says it can’t turn over most of the 2,500 pages of records
from its investigation because it would violate the privacy of taxpayers.
Texas-based
True the Vote and 42 other groups have filed a lawsuit claiming the IRS targeted them based on their beliefs and
politics.
Catherine Engelbrecht, founder of True the Vote, said the
“notion that the IRS can target Americans for years because of their political
beliefs is reprehensible.”
The
IRS exacerbated the scandal by repeatedly
telling disbelieving congressional investigators that it couldn’t provide
relevant emails because of hard-drive failures.
U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton also ordered the agency to
find out what happened to the hard drive after IRS Commissioner John Koskinen
claimed a computer malfunction had caused the loss of two years of emails
belonging to IRS executive Lois Lerner, whose tax-exempt division improperly
targeted conservative groups.
Lerner claimed her emails were lost when her hard drive
crashed July 13, 2011. She said the crash caused her to lose all her emails
sent to recipients outside the IRS from mid-2009 to mid-2011.
David
Ferriero, the archivist of the United States
for the National Archives and Records Administration, testified the federal
agency failed to follow the law in handling Lerner’s emails, raising even more
suspicion about their content.
A
key House leader addressing the issue, Oversight
Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., told IRS officials, at a minimum,
“You did not tell the whole truth.
The
committee accused the IRS of sending the
FBI a database containing more than a million pages of confidential taxpayer
information. Officials
later said the emails that had been “destroyed” were
found, but they were unsorted and details were unavailable.
Robert Wood commented in Forbes: “First, there was no
targeting by the IRS. Then there was, but only by those rogue IRS employees
down in Cincinnati. … Then, top IRS official Lois Lerner refused to testify.
IRS Commissioner Miller seemed defiant too and was sacked. Then, there was a
year-long congressional investigation before the IRS finally admitted the 2009
through 2011 Lois Lerner’s emails ‘disappeared.’ Then, the backups … were
recycled. Then, the new IRS commissioner said the IRS needs a bigger tech
budget.”
Wood said American taxpayers, as well as thousands of
dedicated IRS employees, deserve an explanation.
“The vast bulk of them are doing their best and helping not
hurting the system. Their position is undermined by the awful bumbling and
worse the IRS scandal … has revealed.”
Obama, meanwhile, insisted in an interview there’s “not even
a smidgen of corruption” in the IRS.
http://www.wnd.com/2015/01/gop-senate-tells-obama-to-cough-up-emails/
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