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Government’s
Warrantless Search & Attempted Warrantless Seizure Leads to Shooting Rampage
For Immediate Release
December 27, 2000
Contact: Red Hen Resources
Attn: Virginia L. Cropsey, J.D.
520 West Fourteen Mile #117
Troy, MI 48083 810/578-5899
e-mail: Virginia Cropsey
Distribute to all outlets; please forward
Breaking News…
Government’s Warrantless
Search & Attempted Warrantless Seizure Leads to Shooting Rampage; Boston
Again the Scene of Tax Revolt; Legal Scholar Says Government Evasion of
Constitutional Requirements for Tax Searches and Seizures Led to Killings
Reports
indicate an employee of a Boston Internet consulting firm shot and killed seven
co-workers who apparently participated in plans to honor warrantless government
searches for and seizures of the employee’s earnings, accrued and future.
The law, constitutional and
statutory, requires a Fourth Amendment warrant, executive or judicial, for tax
searches and seizures, but the IRS has routinely operated without them,
provoking an outcry, producing litigation, and fomenting office stress that has
now resulted in violence. "Without a valid warrant, no legally valid proof
of a tax debt exists," said Virginia L. Cropsey, J.D., a graduate of Wayne
State University School of Law and the University of Michigan, and author of an
Internet newsletter and new website, http://www.getawarrant.com,
that expose the legal insufficiency of IRS notices of levy.
"The Fourth Amendment
accords protection to a person’s "effects," Cropsey says, "and
that includes a person’s accounts receivable." The Fourth Amendment was
inspired by the 1761 speech in Boston against the writs of assistance by James
Otis, an attorney engaged by the merchants of Boston. British issuance of
the writs of assistance, which are similar to the current IRS
"process" led to the Revolutionary War. A young John Adams, later
second President of the United States, heard the Otis speech and was inspired to
draft a provision, Article XIV, for the 1780 Massachusetts Declaration of
Rights, which later became the basic language for the Fourth Amendment, Cropsey
says. At the time of the construction of the Bill of Rights, Richard Henry Lee,
Senator from Virginia, and an ancestor of Robert E. Lee, saw to it the word
"effects" rather than "possessions" was used in the Fourth
Amendment, so that accounts receivable, which would include the apparent
shooter, Michael McDermott’s earnings, have Fourth Amendment protection. This
means, and the 4th and 5th Amendment pre-judgment seizure
case law shows, that a warrant is required, according to Cropsey. Additionally,
wages are special property for purposes of pre-judgment seizure under the
Supreme Court decision in Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp. You can’t seize
property for taxes in this country pre-judgment without a sworn statement, says
Cropsey. "Certainly the government should have to swear the debt is owed
and demonstrate probable cause for these searches and seizures. The IRS has no
business writing your employer about you and interfering with your employment
relations without proper authorization."
Recently Cropsey showed that
the Fourth Amendment’s "no warrants" clause was intended by the
Framers to require at a minimum, an executive branch warrant for tax
seizures. “I call it ‘all about adjectives,’” said Cropsey. “I read
the case law more carefully than most attorneys, and noted that the Supreme
Court said in its 1977 opinion in GM Leasing that a judicial warrant was
necessary for entry into private premises for tax seizures. I knew from the
plain language of the Fourth Amendment, and from research I did on the 1762 case
of Entick v. Carrington & Three Other King’s Messengers, a British
sedition case, and from other research, that at least an executive branch
warrant was necessary for other tax seizures. I’m a bit like the kid in
“6th Sense” – I don’t see dead people, but I see something
the others didn’t due to my careful reading of the Fourth Amendment’s 'no
warrants' clause – I see executive branch warrants."
These executive branch warrants
were held to be required for federal tax seizures. Pre-1954 case law exposed in
a 1998 opinion in Williams v.
Boulder Dam Credit Union by Clark County Nevada Magistrate Victor Miller
held the executive branch warrant is required, Cropsey says. Cases concerning
the issue of the warrant requirement are just beginning to make their way
through the courts, she says. In order to avoid a Fourth Amendment test, the
government does not cross the line and technically seize the property; it has
not been using the language obfuscated case law says is required for seizure –
"is seized and levied upon," according to Cropsey, who says she spent
over 1000 hours researching the issue and who has 60 pages briefed on the
subject in the Michigan Court of Appeals, as well as on the question of whether
private sector employers are required to withhold wages without a signed wage
withholding order in effect. "They used quite a few standard legal tricks.
It was a textbook case of stealthy encroachment." The levy situation leaves
banks and employers subject to suit on contracts, and without a defense that
they honored a levy under 26 U.S.C. 6331 & 6332 since no levy occurs,
according to Cropsey. Cropsey’s briefs show the pre-1954 case law was
continued in effect by Congress under the 1954 Code. Since then, a consumer
snatch-back line of cases in the Supreme Court makes clear that the Due Process
clause of the Fifth Amendment requires sworn statements for pre-judgment
seizure. These standards also apply to federal tax seizures according to the
Supreme Court, Cropsey says.
Cropsey says her research also
shows future earnings aren’t property under state law, and therefore under 26
U.S.C. Sec. 6331, the federal tax levy statute, so the IRS cannot reach future
earnings with current levy process as they currently do.
"The situation is
despicable; every member of Congress, every President in modern times, bears
responsibility for allowing this situation to occur," she says, and
encourages citizens to write Congress and the President and demand the IRS
obtain the warrants the Constitution requires for tax searches and seizures. The
warrant is critical to show all the necessary procedures and laws have been
complied with to allow the government to seize the property, she says. "One
judge stated he’d never seen anything like what my research exposes in 23
years on the bench."
"The IRS can’t get a
warrant for these tax seizures because no competent authority can swear the tax
debt is due and owing. The Constitution prohibits direct taxes without
apportionment. The government is avoiding a test of the Constitutionality of the
income tax by not technically seizing the property. It’s a double-end run of
the Constitution, one the framers Fourth Amendment language was written to
prevent, and one which must end immediately," Cropsey said. "The IRS
has engaged in a calculated campaign to intimidate attorneys, legislators and
others who should have reported this situation into silence – the situation is
grim."