Las Vegas Review-Journal

IRS serves its ‘customers’ by terrifying them

- JACOB SULLUM Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @Jacobsullu­m.

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Stax season begins, the IRS is making a show of using its newly expanded budget to improve the agency’s “customer service,” mainly by trying to answer the questions of perplexed taxpayers more than 13 percent of the time. Its biggest challenge will be persuading Americans that they qualify as customers of the IRS in any meaningful sense.

The IRS, after all, does not provide goods or services that anyone would voluntaril­y choose to buy. Its main function is separating people from their money, and its chief tool is fear, as illustrate­d by the $2.1 million penalty it imposed on an 82-year-old grandmothe­r for failing to file a form on time.

Monica Toth was born in Buenos Aires. She immigrated to the United States in the early 1960s and eventually became a citizen.

Toth’s father prospered as a businessma­n and set aside several million dollars for her in a Swiss bank account. That made Toth subject to a requiremen­t that Americans report foreign accounts containing more than $10,000 on a one-page form known as an FBAR.

Toth says she initially was not aware of that requiremen­t. When she discovered her error in 2010, she tried to correct it by filing FBARS for prior years, but that paperwork somehow was routed to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

A 2011 IRS audit found that Toth had sometimes overpaid and sometimes underpaid her income taxes. On balance, she owed about $40,000 in taxes and penalties. But that was not the end of it. Because the IRS concluded that Toth’s FBAR failure was “willful,” she was subject to what the National Taxpayer Advocate describes as “draconian penalties” that are “among the harshest civil penalties the government may impose.”

Toth’s penalty came to $2,173,703.

That jaw-dropping sum was unrelated to the gravity of Toth’s offense or to any injury the government had suffered. She argued that it violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “excessive fines.”

The 1st Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals disagreed, concluding that Toth’s penalty did not qualify as a fine because its purpose was “remedial.”

As the Institute for Justice noted in a Supreme Court petition it filed on Toth’s behalf, that characteri­zation was utterly implausibl­e because the government itself has described the aims of FBAR penalties as punishment and deterrence. Justice Neil Gorsuch highlighte­d that point when the court declined to hear Toth’s appeal last week.

“The notion of ‘nonpunitiv­e penalties’ is ‘a contradict­ion in terms,’” Gorsuch wrote in his dissent. “The government did not calculate Ms. Toth’s penalty with reference to any losses or expenses it had incurred. The government imposed its penalty to punish her and, in that way, deter others.”

Such deterrence is crucial for the IRS, which understand­s that people prefer to keep their hard-earned money and strives to counter that instinct by making terrifying examples of taxpayers who break the rules, even when their violations are accidental, relatively inconseque­ntial or both.

Toth surely does not see herself as a customer of the IRS, and neither does the average taxpayer, who every year confronts the frustratio­n of complying with a byzantine tax code and the anxiety of triggering a grueling, life-disrupting audit. Against that reality, the agency’s promises to answer the phone a little more often do not count for much.

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