Richard Yancey’s Confessions of a Tax Collector and Greg Damm
For the original article please found at PROLibertate blog CLICK HERE
“If it were up to me, I’d line ‘em all up against a wall and shoot them.”
Such was the sentiment expressed by one of Richard Yancey’s [IRS] supervisors during his brief and robustly unpleasant stint as a collection officer for the Internal Revenue Service. Yancey has recounted his experiences in exquisitely revolting detail within the pages of his book, Confessions of a Tax Collector – which, given the rapid approach of Tax Day, is seasonally appropriate reading.

Why in the name of all that is rational are people afraid of al-Qaeda and remote Jihadists of a similar stripe when the IRS runs rampant within our borders, marinating its personnel in murderous hatred of the agency’s victims?
“This is war,” Yancey was told by a superior early in his 13-year career. “Surely this simple truth has occurred to you at some point in the last six months. You are at war.”

“The language of war and the culture of conflict are the only means to prepare us for what is expected of us,” Yancey recalls in his memoir. “How else could they [those at the top of the agency's criminal hierarchy] demand what was expected of us? You can’t take [taxpayers'] life savings, their car, their paycheck, the roof over their head and the heads of their children, without dehumanizing them, without casting yourself in a role that by necessity makes them the enemy.”
Those who are educated in the IRS’s training madrassas are required to dehumanize the taxpayer. They are likewise taught to believe that the State – that holiest of institutions — is never wrong.
On one occasion recorded by Yancey, he and other trainees were informed that the IRS had no use for agents “who anguished over each closure, as if their decision meant life or death for the taxpayer.” When one trainee objected that this often is literally the case, the trainer replied that the agency’s role has nothing at all to do with “doing the right thing for the taxpayer”; it was simply that of “protecting the government’s interest.”
“But what if the government’s interest is wrong?” objected the blessedly obtuse trainee.
“Our interest is never wrong or right,” responded the trainee. “It just is.”
Some dare call this nihilism.
Former IRS District Chief David Patnoe has admitted that his agency specializes in terrorism: “More tax is collected by fear and intimidation that by the law. People are afraid of the IRS.”

To which Yancey adds that the agency uses terrorism to cultivate informants: “No one likes to hear this, but your neighbor is not your friend. All I had to do was flash my commission and I’d have your life story…. Your neighbor is going to tell the IRS where you work, what kind of car you drive, what kind of jewelry you wear….” And so on. Not content with compiling a financial profile, IRS investigators will squeeze from neighbors and associates whatever potentially compromising details they can find regarding the target of an investigation: “Drink a little too much? Seeing a psychologist? Had an abortion? Faking a disability? We’ll know. And most of the time, we won’t even have to ask.”
What can’t be wrung from human sources, the IRS will obtain through data-mining by way of the Integrated Data Retrieval System, the agency’s proprietary database. Through IDRS, Yancey notes, he could learn, almost instantly, more about taxpayers “than they know themselves.”

Yancey, incidentally, was referring to an information system he first used in the early 1990s, which is practically the Pleistocene Era where computer technology is concerned.
(For more about Yancey’s book, please see my article “Repackaging the IRS,” originally published two years ago in The New American and now available at The Right Source.)
From the Right Source Article:
To the cynic, the fundamental question is this: what’s in it for the IRS? The obvious answer is found in Commissioner Everson’s invitation to taxpayers seeking refund checks: “All you have to do is tell us where you are.” Understood in the context of the IRS’s “Four Protocols,” Everson’s supposed invitation actually hides an implicit threat.Former IRS revenue officer Richard Yancey describes the “Four Protocols,” also known as “the rules we may not say,” in his revealing new memoir, Confessions of a Tax Collector:
* Find where they are.
* Track what they do.
* Learn what they have.
* Execute what they fear.The fourth protocol, naturally, is “enforcement,” or the seizure and sale of taxpayer property, and to enforce IRS collections, the IRS needs to know where people live, hence the “invitation.” It is in executing the dreadful fourth protocol–not the diligent delivery of unclaimed refunds–that an IRS agent finds the key to career advancement.
One of Yancey’s most interesting observations is that IRS collection agents generally avoid going after organized crime figures – the case of Al Capone being relatively exceptional. This aversion is born out of understandable fear of violent retaliation, but also reflects the fact that the typical gangster, unlike the law-abiding taxpayer, enjoys political protection of some kind.
In every particular, the IRS is a criminal syndicate operating under color of positivist “law.” A federal lawsuit in Las Vegas – the city built by organized crime – is testing whether the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations act (RICO) can be used against IRS agents, federal prosecutors, and police officials who participated in an unnecessary armed assault against a businessman in 2003.
The plaintiff, Robert Kahre, runs a construction business in which all of his workers are independent contractors paid in real money – gold and silver, issued by the US Mint, rather than the State’s fraudulent scrip. As ICs, the workers are responsible to pay their own taxes.
In May 2003, Kahre’s business sites were hit with – what else? — a paramilitary raid by SWAT teams working in tandem with federal personnel. About fifty agents armed with submachine guns invaded Kahre’s offices, confiscating papers, computers, and – of course – cash.
More than 20 employees and members of Kahre’s family were handcuffed and held at gunpoint; the detainees included an 85-year-old man and a 14-year-old boy. Some of the victims of this act of State terrorism were held outside, in direct sunlight and 106-degree heat, without water, for hours at a stretch. One site was reportedly searched without a warrant. Kahre himself was arrested on a state warrant by an IRS agent, who didn’t have jurisdiction over the matter.
On May 22, Kahre goes to trial, facing 109 charges, including failure to withhold taxes from his employees (which he doesn’t need to do for ICs), conspiracy (which requires a predicate criminal offense, and there may not be one here), and “attempting to interfere with the administration of Internal Revenue Service Laws.”
The prosecutor at that trial will be Assistant U.S. Attorney J. Gregory Damm, who is the lead defendant in Kahre’s RICO suit, as well as a separate civil rights action.
Damm has attempted, without success, to have the civil rights lawsuit (which was filed immediately after the raid) dismissed. In October 2004, Federal Judge Philip Pro ruled that Damm is “not entitled to absolute immunity for claims that he planned every phase of an unlawful raid.” In March 2005, an appeal by Damm and IRS agents was rejected by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Three weeks after losing that appeal, Damm secured the first tax indictment against Kahre.
“Wouldn’t you like to indict the person who just sued you?” commented San Diego attorney William Cohan, who is representing Kahre, to the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Now that Damm is the defendant in two federal lawsuits filed by Kahre, he is ethically required to recuse himself from the case against the businessman. Yet he is still, as of now, scheduled to be the lead prosecutor when the trial begins on May 22.
Clearly, there was no justification for the armed raid in May 2003. Damm could very well lose the civil rights case, or be forced to settle it; in fact, the Feds might well do this in an attempt to pre-empt the RICO action. And it’s difficult to see how a reasonably competent defense attorney could fail to persuade at least some jurors that the indictment against Kahre was an act of cynical retaliation by a petty, corrupt, and incompetent prosecutor.
Did someone say “incompetent”?
Roughly a year ago, a $14 million securities fraud case Damm built against a clique of shady attorneys – people accused, plausibly, of defrauding investors out of their money, which (unlike violations of the IRS code) is an actual crime – was thrown out of court because he refused to turn over more than 600 pages of discovery materials to the defense.
When James Mahan, the Federal District Judge at the trial, confronted Damm about this omission, the prosecutor replied with such flippancy that the Judge reportedly threatened to have him “spend the evening with the marshals” unless the materials were provided immediately. Among the facts Damm and his associates attempted to conceal was the fact that several prosecution witnesses who had already testified had struck plea bargain agreements.
How far down in the Great Chain of Being does this Damm guy have to be in order to earn a slap-down from a trial judge, after enduring one from the appellate judge to refused to dismiss the civil rights suit?
It would be easy for a defense attorney to portray Kahre as the victim of an incompetent legal bureaucrat looking to take out his frustrations on a helpless citizen – and that approach would probably play in Vegas. So as I lift my aquiline nose to the wind, I catch the faint scent of settlement offers in the clouds gathering over this case.
In addition to the Damm problems with this case, it’s interesting that his supervisor, until less than a month ago, was Daniel Bogden, one of the eight US attorneys removed in the White House-orchestrated political purge. Perhaps the Feds will conclude that they have trouble enough in that US Attorney’s office without pursuing the case against Kahre.
Then again, the Leviathan might want to make an example out of Kahre, and spare no expense to do so. In either case, the chief objective will be to do whatever is in the best interest of the apparatus of fraud, plunder, and terror of which the detestable IRS is a representative component.

June 14th, 2009 at 7:09 am
Sir, your article concerning IRS abuses against a taxpayers business is just the tip of the iceberg. You mention the Integrated Data Retrieval System which is the IRS main computer system. According to law all agency records are required to be accurate, complete, timely and relevant. This being the case they we should assume that the computer system is loaded with software developed within the guidelines of the law.
I’ll get right to the point, why is there over 500 different project codes designed to adjust the computer software? Why is it that when the taxpayers computer account is first established there are two entities on the account? Who is the other party on the account? How is it that postings are made on the IRS account record containing a document locator number but no records exist? I have been privately translating these IRS IDRS records for more than 25 years. I can provide the facts directly from the IRS government website.
I could continue with facts of IRS manipulation of their own IRDS record if you believe there is an interest.
Patrick Lynch
June 14th, 2009 at 12:31 pm
Please do Mr. Lynch.
I would love to see all people that are working to expose the IRS and Federal Reserve to post comments as often as they would like to.
If you would like to send me info to make a whole article written by you just write me at christopher@independentamerican.org and I will post your article.
And tell your IRS fighting friends to make this a web site with a wealth of information.
Any person that wants to become a reporter for Independent American News can send me articles. I reserve the right to edit them but I am pretty easy and post most info for consideration.
I certainly do not believe all of the things I read about the IRS and about what to do. For example, I totally disagreed with Irwin and filing ZERO returns. If you file you become a taxpayer. Non-taxpayers are not required to file PERIOD.
But I will post info for those who file and still want to fight so send away.
June 14th, 2009 at 6:52 pm
The following IRS website was first found by a well known lady researcher back in 2002. The IRS makes the statement that all filers may be doing it wrong and that taxpayers could avoid payment of taxes. Due to this posting upon the Internal Revenue Manual does it appear that most criminal and civil tax cases are unjustified?
Official Use Only (OUO) material includes, … Data processing information which would result in taxpayers altering their filing practices or avoiding payment of taxes. [See IRM 1.11.2.6 (05-01-2008)]
June 15th, 2009 at 10:58 am
The last message by Patrick Lynch does not provide the URL of “The following IRS website” referenced. Can that be provided?
As one who suffered tremendous losses (over $100,000) due to flatly illegal IRS agents acting as criminal marauders under color of law, and who managed to “win” (sort of) as a Pro Se in adversary court (though I didn’t get my property back), I have a vested interest in seeing this illegal agency — not even established by any law — abolished and its leadership permanently incarcerated or worse to the fullest extent of the law. I want to thank Patrick Lynch and Christopher of Independent American News for everything you do.
December 22nd, 2009 at 3:02 pm
I say it! Just delightful! Your authorship manner is charming and the way you handled the topic with grace is applaudable. I am intrigued, I make bold you are an expert on this subject. I am subscribing to your incoming updates from now on.