Catching the Internal Revenue Service for Messing Up by Way of Postal Records
January 3, 2010
If you bought my IRS Lien Thumper and IRS Terminator packages you would have been able to use the Freedom of Information Act requests (FOIA) to request postal records respecting the Certified mailings of Notices of Lien mandatory by 26 USC § 6320 and Final Notices of Intent to Levy required by 26 USC § 6330. Those requests are for a Postal record, that the Internal Revenue Manual says is supposed to be signed by a Postal worker, and is required to be kept in its hard copy form by the Internal Revenue Service for 10 years. When the Internal Revenue Service fails to keep to administrative process they are obliged to remove, or more technically, withdraw their liens or refund levied funds. The IRS Lien Thumper and IRS Terminator packages discuss this strategy in more detail. You can obtain both of those packages together at a substantial discount.
If the alleged taxpayer can prove that the the Service has not followed all of their administrative steps it can be conducive to winning a Collection Due Process Hearing that can suspend collection activities and stop the implementation of an IRS levy against funds in a bank or paycheck, as is discussed in more detail in the free videos at www.irsterminator.com.
Individuals who have asked for Postal record FOIAs from the Internal Revenue Service have received two different answers at this point: 1) They have neglected to provide the record; 2) They have provided a record that looks to have been fabricated. When they provide a record that appears to have been fabricated is when a FOIA to the Postal Service becomes indispensable to verify the truth of the record.
The Postal Service asks that FOIAs be mailed to the custodian of the records. The custodian is the head of the postal facility where the information is stored. In most instances, it will be a postmaster. To me this means that my customers will have to determine where the IRS placed the Certified mail in the mail and their FOIA request will be going to the postmaster at that facility. A search at the US Postal Service’s website to ascertain the address of the facility should prove fruitful. The FOIA Act itself tells us that the envelope containing your request state that it is a “Freedom of Information Act Request” on the exterior.
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