Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Accidental deletion of IRS emails is just not possible on so many levels.



DOJ Lawyer Anonymously Comments on Notion IRS Scandal Emails ‘Accidentally’ Deleted




It's getting very tiring having the White House and government in general believing that We The People are so stupid as to buy the story of "accidentally deleted" emails.   By law every government document (including emails) are backed up.   And now with the NSA Data Mining program there are even more copies to be found.   

It is truly amazing that with scandal after scandal coming to light there are still people so naive as to believe and support anything this administration says.   When confronted with undeniable facts their only responses are "Bush's fault", "racist", "hater", "bigot" and the ever popular "Right Wing Extremist".   Through it all one simple fact remains.   This is Obama and the Democrats administration and after six years it is entirely their fault.  

This is the most corrupt dishonest and unlawful administration to ever step foot into office.   Compared to THIS administration, the Nixon administration all deserve sainthood. 

What do you think would happen if I sent the following letter to the IRS.

Dear IRS
I’m sorry, butt I had all my 2013 tax information on my computer I hit print and damn the hard drive crashed.  I will have to skip my 2013 tax as all my data was destroyed.
Sincerely

That’s no different than what they expect us to believe…



IRS Has Lost More E-mails . . .
By Eliana Johnson 

It’s not just Lois Lerner’s e-mails. The Internal Revenue Service says it can’t produce e-mails from six more employees involved in the targeting of conservative groups, according to two Republicans investigating the scandal.

The IRS told Ways and Means chairman Dave Camp and subcommittee chairman Charles Boustany that computer crashes resulted in additional lost e-mails, including from Nikole Flax, the chief of staff to former IRS commissioner Steven Miller, who was fired in the wake of the targeting scandal. 

The revelation about Lerner’s e-mails rekindled the scandal and today’s news has further inflamed Republicans. Camp and Boustany are now demanding a special prosecutor to investigate “every angle” of the targeting. They expressed particular outrage that the agency has known since February that it would not be able to produce the e-mails requested by the committee yet did not apprise the committee of that fact, and they charged in a statement that the IRS is attempting to “cover up the fact that it convenient lost key documents in the investigation.”

If Lerner is the central figure in the scandal — Oversight Committee chairman Darrell Issa said Monday evening he believes she was the senior-most official involved — Flax may be an important auxiliary figure. E-mails produced in response to a Freedom of Information Act request from the group Judicial Watch show Flax giving the green light to Lerner’s request to meet with Department of Justice officials to explore the possibility of criminally prosecuting nonprofit groups — at the suggestion of Democratic senator Sheldon Whitehouse — for engaging in political activity after declaring on their application for nonprofit status that they had no plans to do so.

E-mails uncovered by the committee last week showed that, in preparation for her meeting with the Department of Justice, Lerner and one of her advisers transmitted 1.1 million pages of data on nonprofit groups, including confidential taxpayer information, to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, potentially in violation of federal law.

 

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