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Anti-tax author banned from selling his advice
By KEN
RITTER
LAS
VEGAS, Associated Press, October 22, 2008
A
federal judge has permanently barred convicted tax rebel and author Irwin
Schiff and a co-defendant from preparing tax returns and marketing products
advising people that no law requires Americans to pay federal income taxes.
Federal officials said the permanent injunction by Senior U.S. District
Court Judge Lloyd George in Las Vegas ensures that Schiff and his former
business partner, Cynthia Neun, "cannot promote tax fraud schemes from
within prison or when they are released."
"The
Internal Revenue Service and Justice Department have strong civil and
criminal enforcement tools available to stop tax defiers who promote
fraudulent schemes," Justice Department lawyer Nathan Hochman said in a
statement following George's Oct. 14 order. The filing made permanent a
restraining order and preliminary injunction first imposed in 2003.
Schiff, 80, and Neun, 55, are serving federal prison sentences after a jury
in Las Vegas found them guilty in October 2005 of conspiracy, tax evasion
and tax fraud.
Schiff
was sentenced to 12 years and seven months by U.S. District Judge Kent
Dawson, who branded Schiff and his Las Vegas company, Freedom Books, "a
flimflam operation" that encouraged others to engage in a fraudulent tax
evasion scheme.
Dawson
last month added another 11 months to Schiff's prison term for 15 contempt
citations Schiff received while serving as his own lawyer during trial.
Schiff has also been ordered to pay more than $4.2 million in restitution.
Michael Nash, a lawyer who represented Schiff at sentencing, said Wednesday
that Schiff is no longer his client. Attorney Michael Cristalli, who
represented Neun, said he was not involved in the government's move to seek
a permanent injunction and could not comment.
Neun
is due to be released in 2010 after a five year and eight month sentence.
Schiff
wrote several books, including "The Federal Mafia: How the Government
Illegally Imposes and Unlawfully Collects Income Taxes," which the
government banned from circulation as fraudulent commercial speech. |