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Source: IRS Officials Knew of Targeting Conservative Groups

A congressional source said IRS officials knew in June 2011 that conservative groups were getting additional scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status.
Internal Revenue Service

Washington (CNN) — Officials at the Internal Revenue Service knew in June 2011 that their agents were targeting conservative groups for additional scrutiny on tax documents, an inspector general report expected to be released next week is expected to say. A congressional source familiar with the inquiry told CNN this on Saturday, confirming information first reported by the Associated Press.

An IRS official on Friday admitted the agency made “mistakes” in the last few years with tax-exempt status applications and specifically those submitted by groups with the words “tea party” or “patriot” in their name. Multiple conservative groups have said their applications were delayed and returned with lengthy requests for supporting materials, sometimes including website printouts and lists of guest speakers.

The Treasury Department inspector general for tax administration launched an audit of the agency’s practices, and spokesman David Barnes said the report is being finalized and is expected to be released next week.

Barnes said the review was requested by Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and focused on programs and operations. An audit is separate from an investigation, which would assess wrongdoing such as violation of law or policies.

President Barack Obama’s spokesman Jay Carney said Saturday that Obama believes the government should be staffed with “the very best public servants with the highest levels of integrity” and that “based on recent media reports, he (Obama) is concerned that the conduct of a small number of Internal Revenue Service employees may have fallen short of that standard.”

“If the Inspector General finds that there were any rules broken or that conduct of government officials did not meet the standards required of them, the president expects that swift and appropriate steps will be taken to address any misconduct,” he said in a statement.

Lois Lerner, director of tax-exempt organizations for the IRS, publicly admitted on Friday for the first time that agents used the keywords “tea party” and “patriot” to flag applications for further review, but she stressed that was done as a “shortcut” for picking the applications to review, not out of “political bias.”

The IRS commissioner at the time said at a March 2012 congressional hearing that his agency did not target conservative groups for political reasons.

“I can give you assurances. We pride ourselves in being a nonpolitical, nonpartisan organization,” Commissioner Douglas Shulman said. “There is absolutely no targeting. This is the kind of back and forth that happens when people apply for 501(c)(4) status.”

The congressional source familiar with the inquiry understood that Lerner knew of the targeting in 2011 but sent letters to Congress earlier this year without disclosing the extent of her knowledge.

Lerner said on the Friday conference call that she “did not feel comfortable answering” when senior IRS officials became aware of the situation. She also said she could not give a time frame as to when the IRS began looking into complaints.

She said the IRS has implemented changes to prevent similar mistakes in the future but could not say that any IRS employees had been disciplined.

The applications in question were processed by an office in Cincinnati that handles most applications for 501(c)(4) status and had seen the number of applications rise sharply between 2010 and 2012, she said.

Some 75 conservative groups, flagged by agents because of their names, were among 300 groups singled out for this additional scrutiny, she said. The agency received more than 3,400 501(c)(4) applications in 2012.

“They did pick the cases by names and that’s absolutely inappropriate and not the way we should do things,” she said, though stressing it was done as a “shortcut,” not out of “political bias.”

Officials with some groups subjected to the scrutiny said they would have had to supply thousands of documents stacked inches thick to comply with the requests. Some chose not to, saying the agency was attempting to bury them in paperwork.

Tax exempt groups are allowed to advocate for causes so long as their primary activities are dedicated to “social welfare,” according to IRS rules. When an advocacy case is filed for further review, the IRS tries to determine if the group plans on sticking by that calculus.

Lerner admitted that agents went too far in their questioning and said, “When this came to my attention, we took some action to try and undo some of these things.”

Meanwhile, officials from several groups under review posted about their experiences online and attracted the attention of conservative congressmen and legal groups that took up the fight.

By March of 2012, Congress was asking questions of the IRS. That month, Shulman denied the agency targeted groups for political reasons at the congressional hearing.

There was also an exchange of letters involving Capitol Hill, Shulman and Lerner.

“News reports … indicate that the IRS effort lacks balance, with conservative organizations being the target of the IRS’s scrutiny,” Issa wrote to Lerner in a March 27, 2012 letter obtained by CNN. He noted a Capitol Hill news outlet had “contacted several liberal groups … (and) none had received the recently-sent questionnaire.”

Lerner responded that the IRS sets aside “applications that require further development by an agent in order to determine whether the application meets the requirements for tax-exempt status. …

“The revenue agent uses sound reasoning based on tax law training and his or her experience to review the application and identify the additional information needed to make a proper determination of the organization’s exempt status,” she wrote deeper in the eight-page response.

She did not disclose in that letter the IRS targeted conservative groups, even if for nonpolitical reasons.

Separately, a dozen U.S. senators led by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, sent Shulman a letter asking for more information about this situation.

Shulman’s six-year term ended in November and the agency is currently led by interim commissioner Steven Miller.

The leaders of several conservative groups told CNN on Friday about the IRS’ questions.

Eric Wilson, executive director for the Kentucky 9/12 Project, said he was initially promised a response to his tax-exempt filing within 90 days, but instead received an 88-question inquiry asking for what he described as “far-reaching information.”

They wanted membership lists and detailed information about directors of the group, such as their private activities outside the organization, he said. They also requested copies of pages on their website and social media accounts, such as Facebook and Twitter.

To comply with every request, Wilson said it would have required 5,000 printed pages. “They were trying to bury us in time and money,” he said.

Wilson responded with a one-page letter, saying the questionnaire was beyond normal requests and they would not comply. He started noticing posts online and heard from like-minded conservative groups that they were receiving similar questions from the IRS.

His December 2010 filing was met with a final response just a month ago, on April 1, when the IRS sent him a 200-word letter stating his group had been designated a 501(c)(4) organization with no explanation for the delay.

In Ohio, the Portage County TEA Party was experiencing similar issues. Executive Director Tom Zawistowski said it took his group nearly three years – June 2009 to December 22, 2012 – to receive approval from the IRS.

He filled a four-inch thick binder with materials requested by the IRS, including speakers lists and printouts of every page from its website and Facebook page, every tweet.

His group and 26 others worked with the Washington-based American Center for Law and Justice, which lobbied for action to be taken on the matter.

While conservative groups were the targets, the IRS’ Friday admission drew reaction from both sides of the aisle.

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor announced Friday the House would investigate the matter, saying in a statement “the IRS cannot target or intimidate any individual or organization based on their political beliefs.”

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell called on the White House to conduct “a transparent, government-wide review” to ensure similar practices weren’t being carried out at other agencies.

McConnell, who called an apology from the IRS insufficient, deemed the IRS tactics “political thuggery” with no place in American politics.

The left-leaning American Civil Liberties Union also called out the IRS, saying in a statement, “Even the appearance of playing partisan politics with the tax code is about as constitutionally troubling as it gets.”

Tea Party groups were similarly incensed. The Tea Party Patriots, one of the nation’s largest, rejected an IRS apology and insisted on resignation from the officials involved in the targeting.

Carney told reporters on Friday that the additional scrutiny was “inappropriate.”

“We would fully expect the investigation to be thorough and for corrections to be made in a case like this,” Carney said. “I believe the IRS has addressed that and has taken some action, and there’s an investigation ongoing.”

Issa, the congressman whose committee requested the audit, said in a joint statement with another committee member that they “will aggressively follow up on the IG report and hold responsible officials accountable for this political retaliation.”

The Democratic chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Sen. Carl Levin, also said an investigation into the matter was required.
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