RAW STORY
The bombshell IRS audit released in May omitted information about
liberal groups at the request of House Oversight Committee Chairman
Darrell Issa (R-CA), according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax
Administration’s office.
A spokesman for Treasury Inspector General J. Russell George told The Hill on Tuesday that Issa had requested investigators “narrowly focus on tea party organizations.”
The subsequent audit concluded the IRS used “inappropriate criteria”
to single out for additional scrutiny tea party groups that applied for
tax exempt status. The findings lead almost every politician, including
President Barack Obama, to denounce the IRS. Several Republicans suggested the audit indicated the White House had a Nixonian “enemies list.”
Speaking to CNN on Tuesday,
Issa said the IRS appeared to have been targeting Obama’s political
opponents “perhaps not on his request” but “on his behalf.”
But new documents have revealed that liberal and progressive groups
received similar treatment from the IRS. The “inappropriate criteria”
used to single out tea party groups — so-called “Be On the Look Out”
(BOLO) memos — also singled out progressive and “Occupy” groups.
“We did not review the use, disposition, purpose or content of the
other BOLOs. That was outside the scope of our audit,” the Treasury
inspector general spokesman told The Hill.
The BOLO memos stated tax exempt status for progressive groups “may
not be appropriate” because they were engaged in “anti-Republican”
political activity. On the other hand, the BOLO memos only directed IRS
employees to send tea party applications to a particular group. IRS
officials have said the tea party applications were “centralized” to
insure they received consistent treatment. Exactly how the BOLO memos
were used remains unclear.
The report identified 298 groups that were subjected to additional
scrutiny, and identified 98 of those groups as either tea party, patriot
or 9/12 groups. The remaining 202 groups were labelled as “other.”
During congressional hearings, George was repeatedly asked if these 202
“other” groups included liberal organizations. He said he couldn’t “make
that determination” based on the available evidence. However, several
liberal groups received the same level of IRS scrutiny as tea party groups.
The omitted information has caused Democrats to question whether the audit was truthful.
“Failing
to make this clear in these documents and at Congressional Hearings
even when asked directly has been fully misleading,” Rep. Sandy Levin
(D-MI) wrote in a letter to George on Wednesday. “It has contributed to
the distortion of this entire investigation, including use of innuendo
and totally unsubstantiated assertions of White House involvement.”
The Associated Press
on Wednesday confirmed that liberal and progressive groups were
subjected the same treatment that conservative groups had complained
about, including excessive questioning and extremely long waits. The
liberal group Catholics United, for instance, waited seven years before
receiving tax exempt status, far longer than any tea party group was
forced to wait.
Meanwhile, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration’s
office has continued to defend its audit of the IRS. Karen Kraushaar
told the Associated Press that the inspector general was only “asked to
look at the treatment of organizations known to be affiliated with the
tea party in its review, and was asked to audit the way those
organizations were being treated when they applied for tax-exempt
status.”
Kraushaar implied information regarding liberal and progressive
groups was omitted simply because of the narrow scope of the audit.
House Republicans have denied
they attempted to limit the audit of the IRS. They acknowledged they
requested the audit based off complaints they received from tea party
groups, but that should not have prevented investigators from mentioning
the impact on other effected groups. A Republican aide told The Hill
that the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration had “the
authority to look at whatever they wanted to, and would be expected to
do so if there was wrongdoing.”
Issa had previously released excerpts
from a congressional investigation that purportedly proved the
“targeting of conservative political groups came from Washington, D.C.”
Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD) later released the full transcripts to show
there was no evidence the Obama administration was involved.
No comments:
Post a Comment