IRS Continues to Sweat the NAACP for Speech Documents
Saturday, April 9, 2005 at 09:35PM
TheSpook
Did the NAACP's chairman violate
nonprofit rules by criticizing President Bush in a speech last year?
That is the question the Internal Revenue Service has been trying to
answer for some time, TaxAnalysts.com reported. The National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People has refused for the
second time this year to turn over documents tied to the speech by the
civil rights group's chairman Julian Bond that the IRS contend may have
amounted to a political campaign, in violation of section 501(c)(3) of
the tax code. The NAACP's counsel, Marc Owens of Caplin & Drysdale
in Washington, sent a letter on Feb. 23 to the IRS's Area Counsel
Laurence D. Ziegler stating the NAACP had not complied with the IRS's
January summons to produce the documents because the group believed the
summons was unenforceable. The NAACP's attorneys said they are clear
that the IRS is not calling the political statements “flagrant” which
is why the IRS is not taking immediate tax action against the
organization. They asked the IRS to close the investigation and
indicated they would not appear at the March 11 meeting. [more]
IRS Asking Justice Department to Step in on NAACP Audit [more]
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