Page 108 - Fruits from a Poisonous Tree
P. 108

92     Fruit from a Poisonous Tree
                                                                 No Implementation of Law



                                Title 44 USC states that every regulation or rule must be published in
                            the Federal Register. It also states that the Secretary of the Treasury must
                            approve every regulation or rule. If there is no regulation there can be no
                            implementation of the law. There is no regulation governing “willful failure
                            to file a return.” There is no computer code for “failure to file.” The only thing
                            I could find was a requirement stating “where to file an income tax return”.
                            It can be found in 26 CFR, Section 1 6091-3, which states that, “Income tax
                            returns required to be filed with Director of International Operations.”
                                Who is the Director of International Operations?



                                                                     Delegation of Authority



                                No one in government is allowed to do anything unless they have been
                            given specific written authority by law, or unless someone who has been given
                            authority in the law gives that person a delegation of authority order spelling
                            out exactly what they can and cannot do under that specific order.
                                I researched the Department of the Treasury’s Handbook of Delegation
                            Orders and found that no one in the IRS or BATF has any authority to do
                            most of the things they have been doing for years. The IRS cites Treasury
                            Order 150-10, dated April 22, 1982, as the delegation of authority to the
                            Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service for the collection of taxes.
                            Close examination of the documents created serious doubts with this
                            researcher as to the legality of the Order 150-10.
                                Delegation of Authority Order 150-37, dated April 22, 1982, superseded
                            the previous  Treasury Order 150-37, dated March 17, 1955.  Treasury
                            Secretary Ronald T. Regan duly signed treasury Order 150-37, dated April
                            22, 1982. The Official Seal of the Department of the Treasury was affixed
                            to the letterhead. The stationary date at the lower left hand corner of the
                            document was (2-81).
                                The Internal Revenue Service relied upon the Delegation of Authority
                            Order 150-10 as its current authority. Upon close inspection of this Order,
                            the Official Seal of the Secretary of the Treasury has been modified and
                            was not the actual seal of the Secretary as was depicted on Order 150-37.
                            Furthermore the date of this order was April 22, 1982, which is the same
                            date that the former Delegation of Authority Order 150-37 was signed. The
                            Secretary did not sign this Delegation of Authority Order, and the stationary
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