Thursday, July 25, 2013

The IRS Mafia: Hush Money and Politics

American Spectator - Ex-IRS Employee: IRS targeting of Christine O’Donnell “not an aberration.”

It wasn’t an accident.

And the IRS has used hush money.

A former IRS employee — that would be IRS employee-turned-whistle blower Stanley Welli — tells The American Spectator that the IRS targeting of Delaware Republican U.S. Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell, a Tea Party favorite, was neither “isolated” nor “an aberration.”

O’Donnell was recently notified by the IRS that the agency had “received information that your personal federal tax info may have been compromised and may have been misused by an individual…”

Well, a 34-year IRS employee who ran afoul of the IRS culture way back in 1983 and continued to fight it all the way through his retirement in 1996, also accuses the IRS of offering him $15,000 in hush money if Welli would drop an internal grievance filing that came about after Welli and two fellow IRS managers “reported that the executive to whom we reported was associating with organized crime-linked individuals in Chicago and Milwaukee.”

In short, Welli and his two colleagues believed the IRS had in its midst a mobbed-up IRS supervisor. As it were, the Mafia had infiltrated the IRS.

The O’Donnell targeting, says Welli today, “well illustrates the corrupt mentality that has been so prevalent in the IRS.” Welli adds:

 “Some may say that the tax snooping on Christine O’Donnell is isolated, an aberration. Not so! With the IRS, all the rules go out the window ‘when necessary.’ Anything and anyone is fair game.”   More

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