My previous post looked at the federal government’s troubling decision to investigate, persecute, prosecute, and ultimately imprison a random home-loan borrower named Charlie Engle for the crime of mortgage fraud. Citing a column on the legal fallout from the financial crisis in the New York Times, I noted that it was rather odd that the government would target a nobody like Mr. Engle while letting all the big fish swim away.
This story certainly paints a picture of a government that has one set of rules for ordinary people, but an entirely different set of rules for the political elite and those who make big campaign contributions to that ruling class. But I also noted that I’m not a legal expert and was unsure about the degree to which the big players actually broke laws, or whether they simply made stupid business decisions (often encouraged by bad government policy).
The most upsetting part of the story, though, is how the government wound up targeting Mr. Engle. It turns out that an IRS agent, Robert Norlander, must have been competing for the IRS’s Thug-of-the-Year Award (or maybe it was A-Hole-of-the-Year or Jerk-of-the-Year) because here are some of the things he did:
o Mr. Norlander decided to snoop into Mr. Engle’s because he saw a film about him training for a marathon. In other words, there was no probable cause, no reasonable suspicion, nothing. Just the perverse decision of an IRS bully to go after someone.
o Mr. Norlander admitted a pattern of thuggish behavior, stating that he will snoop into someone’s private life simply because that person drives an expensive car.
o Mr. Norlander continued to investigate and persecute Mr. Engle, subjecting him to undercover surveillance, even though his tax returns showed no wrongdoing.
o Mr. Norlander even engaged in “dumpster dives” to look for evidence of wrongdoing in Mr. Engle’s garbage. Keep in mind that there is no probable cause, no reasonable suspicion, and Engle’s tax returns were legit.
o Mr. Norlander used a sleazy KGB tactic by sending an attractive woman to flirt with Mr. Engle in hopes of getting him to somehow admit to a crime.
o Mr. Norlander failed to find any evidence of a tax crime. He couldn’t even hit Engle with a money-laundering offense. But the undercover agent who was part of the “honey trap” was wearing a wire and supposedly got Engle to admit to mortgage fraud and Norlander used that extremely flimsy evidence to justify a Justice Department case against Mr. Engle.
In other words, this whole thing has a terrible stench. Assuming the details in the story are accurate, we have an IRS agent engaging in a vendetta against someone, and then apparently justifying his jihad by figuring out how to nail the guy for a very weak charge of mortgage fraud. I would refer to Mr. Norlander as a “rogue agent,” but apparently his jackboot behavior is business-as-usual at the IRS.
Here are the relevant passages from the New York Times column.
Mr. Engle received $30,000 for his participation. The film, “Running the Sahara,” was released in the fall of 2008. Eventually, it caught the attention of Robert W. Nordlander, a special agent for the Internal Revenue Service. As Mr. Nordlander later told the grand jury, “Being the special agent that I am, I was wondering, how does a guy train for this because most people have to work from nine to five and it’s very difficult to train for this part-time.” (He also told the grand jurors that sometimes, when he sees somebody driving a Ferrari, he’ll check to see if they make enough money to afford it. When I called Mr. Nordlander and others at the I.R.S. to ask whether this was an appropriate way to choose subjects for criminal tax investigations, my questions were met with a stone wall of silence.) Mr. Engle’s tax records showed that while his actual income was substantial, his taxable income was quite small, in part because he had a large tax-loss carry forward, due to a business deal he’d been involved in several years earlier. (Mr. Nordlander would later inform the grand jury only of his much lower taxable income, which made it seem more suspicious.) Still convinced that Mr. Engle must be hiding income, Mr. Nordlander did undercover surveillance and took “Dumpster dives” into Mr. Engle’s garbage. He mainly discovered that Mr. Engle lived modestly. In March 2009, still unsatisfied, Mr. Nordlander persuaded his superiors to send an attractive female undercover agent, Ellen Burrows, to meet Mr. Engle and see if she could get him to say something incriminating. In the course of several flirtatious encounters, she asked him about his investments. …Unbeknownst to Mr. Engle, Ms. Burrows was wearing a wire. …No tax charges were ever brought, even though that was Mr. Nordlander’s original rationale. Money laundering, the suspicion of which was needed to justify the undercover sting, was a nonissue as well. As for that “confession” to Ms. Burrows, take a closer look. It really isn’t a confession at all. Mr. Engle is confessing to his mortgage broker’s sins, not his own.
Now you understand why I’m a libertarian. As George Washington is reported to have stated, “Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master.”
Unfortunately, thanks to bad laws and thuggish bureaucrats, that government is now our master.
A previous post of mine addressed the issue of whether Republicans were right to trim the IRS’s budget. So long as the IRS is employing thugs such as Mr. Norlander, the answer is a resounding yes.
I didn’t have to read it to despise the IRS.
The words “soft tyranny” come to mind.
I wonder what it cost, at the taxpayer’s expense, to investigate, prosecute, and now jail Charlie? I am sure it cost AT LEAST twice as much as the IRS claim was mortgage fraud. A nice investigation in to this, would be a great blog post Mr. Mitchell.
[...] the meantime, that same all-protective government allows its tax agents to hound citizens for what appears to be sport (none dare call it malice). Those building codes don’t fund [...]
“It really isn’t a confession at all. Mr. Engle is confessing to his mortgage broker’s sins, not his own”
??? It’s not a sin to sign a mortgage application on which one’s income is knowingly incorrect?
I have no problem with him going to jail, I only wish he could be joined by the others who lied on their mortgage applications. For example, why isn’t the mortgage broker not also in jail?
So what that they never charged him with a tax crime? Are you suggesting that law enforcement agents turn their heads if they learn of a crime that lies outside their bailiwick?
And finally, probable cause isn’t required to initiate an investigation. ‘Thuggish’ behavior? Someone looking through the trash is exactly the image I associate with the word thug.
In an earlier America this little IRS bedbug Norlander would have been tarred, feathered, and driven from the town. Welcome to the new banana republic, the USA.
I’ll bet that this was a money losing transaction for the IRS and the U.S. government.
The IRS is the largest extortion group in the world.
Remember the “kinder, gentler” IRS?
It’s time to fire and prosecute creeps like Robert Norlander.
This is like blaming a cop for a thief getting a slap on the hand and being set free by the court system.
Do you not understand that the IRS is the puppet for the Fed Gov? The IRS is the scape goat and hated for it, while no lawmaker in Washington is held accountable for the actions of IRS agents, the very people that impose laws and force the hand of the IRS to enforce them. Great story but follow the real money thugs, ok.
When the huntsmen are not allowed to shoot bear in the Kings Forrest, they may go to extraodinary lengths to bag a squirrel.
John Paul – NO it’s not like that at all; it’s like blaming a cop who sets up a person who has no intention of committing a crime and going beyond the law and have the person, who had no intention of committing a crime and putting them in jail at a cost to taxpayers that is way beyond what it’s worth.
It’s time to fire and prosecute creeps like Robert Norlander.
Andy, you hit it on the nose.
Get a rope and a horse!
[...] are simply carrying out the bad policies imposed by Congress. There certainly are some egregious cases of IRS abuse, but it’s typically the fault of lawmakers for enacting bad [...]
[...] bureaucrats are simply carrying out a bad policies imposed by Congress. There positively are some egregious cases of IRS abuse, though it’s typically a error of lawmakers for enacting bad [...]
[...] bureaucrats are simply carrying out a bad policies imposed by Congress. There positively are some egregious cases of IRS abuse, though it’s typically a error of lawmakers for enacting bad [...]
[...] So you might think I’m in favor of throwing them in prison on the slightest pretext. That’s surely an appealing thought, but one of the main traits of libertarianism is a belief in the rule of law. Arbitrary arrests, trumped-up charges, and unjustified imprisonments should not exist in a civilized society (though I’m ashamed to admit that such things are happening with increasing frequency in the United States). [...]
[...] probably sounds extreme to some people, but this story about IRS abuse should be enough to convince any normal person the the federal government is [...]
[...] rather clueless on matters of popular culture, but I know the IRS is a vicious and needless bureaucracy that plagues the American people (though IRS agents could learn something from their Pakistani [...]
[...] since everyone knows that I’m a big fan of the current tax system and the IRS (speaking of which, here’s a very good joke), let’s celebrate by digging into the Jeff [...]
[...] examples of government thuggery that don’t involve persecution of victimless crimes. This post shows how the IRS can run amok, engaging in brutal persecution. And here’s a story of the government targeting a low-level [...]
If you’re against government you’re a Conservative as our Founding Fathers were and instructed us all to be. Libertarian is something else entirely:
“Libertarianism is to authentic conservatism what Barack Obama is to 19th century liberalism” http://bit.ly/vBBvkk
The thug-like tactics of the IRS are legendary! …but Mr. Norlander takes the cake! What a jerk! He should be fired immediately!
Besides that, Mr. Norlander has wasted time and money that the government doesn’t have. HE should be charged for harassment, and for deliberate false charges against an innocent man.
Mr. Engle should get a public apology, and all charges immediately dropped.
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
Why doesn’t the main stream media publicize these outrages?
Like a not inconsiderable number of government employees, IRS agents such as Robert Norlander have nothing viable to do. So they fill their time by finding hard working people to harass and persecute.
Just like the Greek government employees who require a stool sample to open a business. Or the British who won’t carry an advert for hardworking people because it discriminates against the lazy…
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] a story about a prosecution by the IRS by a vindictive zealot who doesn’t like people who, in this case, trained for a marathon. You [...]
[...] every so often. They allowed this great column on tax sovereignty on their editorial pages, this powerful expose of IRS abuse by a business columnist, and this great graphic on the connection between big banks and government [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
Obtain and read “Unintended Consequences” by author John Ross. Although out-of-print and a little pricey, it is still available on ebay and amazon. It is a good read and offers solutions to our out-of-control government. The book combines fictional characters with accurate historical information and is a how-to book on “getting things done”.
Sellers of this book were harassed by ATF and other government agents. It seems that these government agents were not too keen on the book’s premise.
You have all got this ass-backwards. It’s not the IRS that is bad, it is human beings such as you and I that have allowed this abuse authority to go on.
It can be a Deputy Sheriff, a Police Officer, a Politician, an FBI Agent, a Judge, etc., If those in higher positions of authority allow such mis-deeds to occur, and the citizens say and do nothing to such abuses of power, than we are all at fault for we have allowed it to happen.
It also has nothing to do with being a Democrat, Independent, Libertarian, Republican, White, Black, Red, Yellow, etc., or anything else.
Remember that it is we the people. Not we the Big Business that this foundation was created on, But you have let it slide for more than twenty years.
So, it’s shame on you for allowing and cow-towing to big businesses such as Apple, Telecommunications, and Gas Monopolies, etc., and of course government bureaucrats who forget that they too are part of “We The People.”
So don’t ASSUME it will get better, for it only makes an ass of you and me.
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
Just wait until they put you in jail, to prevent you from committing a crime. When you finally elect Don Cordell for President, the first thing I”ll do is fire the IRS, the BATF, and end many of the tax sucking departments in Washington District of Criminals. So you can either stand up and defend American Rights, or crawl on the ground to kiss the butts of these criminals we’ve elected to lead us. Now is the time, before the SWAT takes all of our guns, all of our Rights, and we come in tears begging for a loaf of bread, and a bag of potato’s to fee our familys
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
Steve? Are you a wicked little troll or what? Why don’t you take your self righteous ass to Washington and see to it that ALL the extremely malice corruption is extinguished there, can ya do that?
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] story of vicious IRS persecution. A family in legal trouble because it rescued a baby deer. A women jailed overnight [...]
[...] A story of vicious IRS persecution. [...]
[...] By the way, if you don’t think the IRS is capable of thuggery, read this horrifying story. [...]
[...] By the way, if you don’t think the IRS is capable of thuggery, read this horrifying story. [...]
[…] But sometimes the IRS deserves some negative attention. The tax collection bureaucracy has thieving employees, incompetent employees, thuggish employees, brainless employees, and victimizing employees. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] By the way, if you don’t think the IRS is capable of thuggery, read this horrifying story. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] against the IRS. If you want that kind of story (and if you have a strong stomach), you can read about how an IRS thug named Robert Norlander tried to ruin the life of a guy named Charlie […]
[…] against the IRS. If you want that kind of story (and if you have a strong stomach), you can read about how an IRS thug named Robert Norlander tried to ruin the life of a guy named Charlie […]
[…] against the IRS. If you want that kind of story (and if you have a strong stomach), you can read about how an IRS thug named Robert Norlander tried to ruin the life of a guy named Charlie […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] And it has victimizing employees. […]
[…] Or should we focus our ire on the IRS, which seems to go above and beyond the call of duty to oppress innocent people? […]
[…] Or should we focus our ire on the IRS, which seems to go above and beyond the call of duty to oppress innocent people? […]