Heather C. Maloy
Deputy Commissioner for Enforcement
Internal Revenue Service
Dear Mrs. Maloy:
My name is Michael Walsh, and I write today in response to the Service’s proposed rule on
rewards and awards for informing. Federal Register Docket No. IRS-2011-0003. The amount
of levity which your office should generate from this proposal is colossal.
Before your office undertakes to write regulations of a technical nature, perhaps it should
firmly fix on a policy regarding whistleblowers. One single unified public policy on whether
whistleblowers are to be welcomed or punished would be far more helpful to your office than
the proposed rule.
Consider the case of Mr. Bradley C. Birkenfeld, one of the most prominent whistleblowers in
the financial industry in recent years. Certainly in an era of economic depression, bank
bailouts, and record tax evasion the public appreciated the tale of Mr. Birkenfeld, a former
UBS bank executive who ratted out his colleagues and was jailed for his trouble. See “Why
Is the UBS Whistle-Blower Headed to Prison?” Time Magazine- 10/2009
http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1928897,00.html
Mr. Birkenfeld is certainly no angel. Indeed, there was a large amount of personal greed in
his decision to become a stool pigeon. It was reported in another news outlet that he
personally reported the fraud and tax evasion which UBS was enabling not because of
virtuous motives, but because he wanted a portion of the reward. Exactly the type of reward
which the technical regulations here address.
Mr. Birkenfeld could have reported the fraud anonymously, but he would have lost out on any
possible whistleblower reward, and also have lost the potential benefit of immunity from
prosecution. As it happens he lost out on both anyway-despite explicit government
assurances to the contrary.
Mr. Birkenfeld should be heralded by the IRS and the Justice Department where his
information led to UBS to pay a $780 Million fine, and to thousands of potential cases. The
only benefit he got was that the Justice Department recommended a 10-month deduction in
his sentence for cooperation, which the federal judge ignored anyway. Mr. Birkenfeld brought
the US Government a large portion of the Swiss Banking Industry on a silver platter. What is
a regular middle-class whistleblower to expect, if someone who can actually deliver the
goods (and a lot of them) is imprisoned? See “Rewards and Dangers of Federal
Whistleblowing” By Robert Langley- http://usgovinfo.about.com/b/2010/11/30/rewards-and-
dangers-of-federal-whistleblowing.htm
From the case law we know that the regular police are allowed to use deception, deceit, and
dishonesty to induce a suspect to confess or incriminate himself. However the IRS is in a
special position, because of its different objective-to collect inland revenue. The IRS is
obviously, and appropriately, not interest in jailing peopling unnecessarily-one of the wealthy
individuals Mr. Birkenfeld reported on settled all claims with the IRS for a $53 Million fine.
Whistleblower rewards, and protections, are designed to encourage individuals to come
forward about wrong-doing. The IRS must remember that the people who will have
information on illegalities tend to be underground players-people on the inside of illegal
schemes-and thus whistleblowers don’t generally come forward with clean hands. In fact it
might be argued that the money reward is required to induce such unsavory characters to
come forward.
If the Justice Department, independently or in coordination with the Service, is waiting with
handcuffs for whoever comes forward, then the money reward isn’t worth it. Prosecutors and
police on the state level can “flip” people and cultivate snitches because they are vested with
the police power and can actually deliver on promises to protect.
Mr. Birkenfeld stands as a public relations disaster for the Whistleblower Office of the IRS.
Moreover the fact that the Service cannot, or did not, protect him from prosecution
emasculates the Service’s ability to make similar promises in the future. Or least the
possibility that such promises will be taken seriously.
Rather than worrying about such technical regulations, the Service should generate real
public confidence in their promises. It was true, at one point in the past, that the Service
NEVER cooperated with the state or federal police in giving information, or tax returns. This
meant that if someone profited from illegal gambling, they could report the income and pay
taxes on it without fear of prosecution.
Greater cooperation and information sharing works well for prosecutors, police, the Bureau,
and other counter-terrorism agencies-including the Treasury’s office of foreign asset control.
However, in the context of the plain old IRS and the taxpayers such information undermines
the Service’s objective to collect tax revenue.
Many states, such as Massachusetts, make tax returns privileged except in obvious cases
like tax fraud. The federal government does not. Indeed, television shows about police
agencies (such as Castle, NCIS, or Without a Trace) regularly show police agencies getting
access to financial and tax information on a whim, without even a search warrant.
If the enforcement arm of the Service is truly serious about collecting taxes, and encouraging
whistleblowing, it should develop a very public over-arching scheme to promote in the
detection of illegal tax evasion. A return to the 1950’s policy of not forwarding reports of
illegal income might serve the Service very well.
Finally, I suggest that the Service hold a public hearing on these regulations. I, for one,
would be particularly interest in hearing Mr. Birkenfeld testify at such a hearing.
Sincerely,
Mike Walsh
REWARDS AND AWARDS FOR INFORMATION RELATING TO VILATIONS OF INTERNAL REVENUE LAWS
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Rewards and Awards for Information Relating to Violations of Internal Revenue Laws
View Comment
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