[RE: ]

LUIS VILDOSOLA lvild at usa.net
Wed Feb 28 16:53:47 PST 2001


The punishment has been justified but is unjust,
it lacks cognitive coherence.

For all the good deeds taxes are justified to exist,
they are not sustained under close scrutiny;
not the scrutiny under which a court decides over
physical restraint of a "tax evader".

All things being equal, these people are slaves of
a new master, a government with the spirit of a ghost.

"B.Chandler" <b.chandler at gte.net> wrote:
> 
> yes quatloos, injustices occur every day.
> 
> answer this, what class of citizens existed before the 14th amendment?
> was every congressman and every president that served prior to the 14th
> amendment frauds? NO .
> Before the 14th Amendment "citizen of the United States" did NOT exist.
> 
> Again, were every congressman and every president that served prior to the
> 14th
> amendment frauds?
> 
> 
> 
> Quatloos Wrote:
> 
> 
> California Couple Sentenced for Helping Clients Evade Taxes
> 
> February 23, 2001
> 
> By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON
> 
> A California couple who helped their clients evade at least $13.8
> million in federal income taxes were sentenced to long prison terms
> yesterday, sentences the judge extended after they said that the
> tax laws were invalid and did not apply to them.
> 
>  The couple, Dorothy and George Henderson of Roseville, Calif.,
> sold trusts through which, customers were told, they could put
> their money beyond the reach of the Internal Revenue Service. The
> couple kept 5 percent of the deposits.
> 
>  Mrs. Henderson, 56, was sentenced to more than 11 years in prison
> and Mr. Henderson, 59, was sentenced to six and a half years by
> Judge Garland E. Burrell Jr. of United States District Court in
> Sacramento.
> 
>  The Hendersons did not testify at their trials, but at a
> sentencing hearing yesterday they told Judge Burrell that the
> I.R.S. had no authority over them and that they would pursue claims
> against the government.
> 
>  They also said they were exempt from tax under Section 861 of the
> Internal Revenue Code, contending that the statute excludes most
> Americans from income taxes.
> 
>  Donald Dorfman, Mrs. Henderson's lawyer, said that he tried to
> show his client that she had misread the law and that rather than
> exempting anyone from taxes it extended the reach of American tax
> law to income from foreign sources.
> 
>  "She wouldn't listen," Mr. Dorfman said. "She insisted on speaking
> and telling the judge about the 861 position and how as a sovereign
> citizen of California the federal courts had no jurisdiction and
> all sorts of gibberish."
> 
>  Mr. Dorfman said the speech caused the judge to add five months to
> Mrs. Henderson's sentence beyond prosecutors' request.
> 
>  The judge gave Mr. Henderson an extra eight months.
> 
>  The 861
> position is being advocated by a small but growing number of
> business owners and others who, calling themselves the tax honesty
> movement, say that the government operates the I.R.S. illegally.
> These business owners have boasted in ads in USA Today and on the
> Internet that they do not pay taxes and say the I.R.S. has not
> acted against them. They cite that as proof that the tax laws are a
> hoax.
> 
>  The case against the Hendersons began several years ago and grew
> out of another case in which four other Californians, including a
> lawyer, were convicted and are now in prison.


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