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The Water Cooler
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IRS Agent Shot and Killed By Another Agent During Training
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<blockquote data-quote="tranger2" data-source="post: 4099333" data-attributes="member: 10076"><p>Just like on any topic, there are some who just spew their thoughts/beliefs without any facts and there are some who appear to research and try to post informed opinions. Good for you.</p><p></p><p>I read these posts and often talk/scream to my screen. I decided to provide my .02 worth. Some will poo poo this and spew their preconceived thoughts and some will honestly take the info, weigh it with their own common sense and give my words whatever credibility they decide.</p><p></p><p>Some information about me so you can see my biases…born Okie, lived here almost 60 years. Brother and nephew are police officers in a big city three hours south. Immediate family members employment includes Federal Bureau of Prisons, Air Marshal, FBI analyst, and my son and several nephews are Jarheads. My brother-in-law lost his legs as a result of a parachute training accident with the Airborne Rangers and is seen often on the Tunnel to Towers commercials for receiving a home. My family tends to suck at the government teat. I come from a religious family with conservative views, stand for the flag, and scream at the TV for silly **** going on in the world today.</p><p></p><p>I was a Special Agent with IRS-Criminal Investigations for 28 years. My comments are all based on working as an agent, never in management, nor serving in Washington, just Oklahoma. I will throw out a few scattered comments for consideration…</p><p></p><p>The IRS operates under Disclosure laws that apply specifically to the agency. Your income tax information CANNOT be shared with others, except for a few exceptions, by law. For instance, YOU can authorize a bank have access to return information. Generally, other federal agencies or law enforcement (police departments included) cannot get your tax return information, they don't have statutory authority. (On limited occasions, an ex-parte order granted by a federal judge can be approved in a criminal investigation but is not common.) Because of disclosure laws, if I were working a straight income tax evasion case, the information cannot be shared to another agency. On these cases, we conducted our own search warrants and arrest warrants just as any other law enforcement agency would. I could be fired and or prosecuted for disclosure, by statute.</p><p></p><p>I know it's hard for you to believe, but most law enforcement agencies do not have forensic accountants available to them. Since most crimes involve money in one way, shape or form, our agents were in high demand if the dollar value of the theft/embezzlement/drug operation/frauds/scams were high enough to reach federal guideline levels. Our jurisdiction in these types of case was investigating money laundering. Follow the money. And that’s what we do.</p><p></p><p>Since we are as involved as the other agency working the case, we carried LEO authority and participate with enforcement activities necessary.</p><p></p><p>When I retired, each agent was issued a Glock 9mm and body armor. Our office had Remington 870 or 1187 shotguns available and S&W .223s. These stayed in the vault and were not issued except for certain enforcement actions. However, we did train with them on a QUARTERLY basis, more than my brother, the Dallas cop (which a sad statement). We went through a lot of ammo on a training day. Sometimes the training consisted of role playing with Sim guns or airsoft guns and occasionally on the FATS machine. The training was always top notch and very professional.</p><p></p><p>For many years, Tinker AFB OSI held a yearly shooting competition for the federal agencies in the state. The competition would generally host 1 to 2 four-man teams per agency. Teams included FBI (who sent their tac team), Secret Service, ATF, DEA, IRS-CI, US Postal Inspectors, BOP, Air Force OSI and some I can’t remember. Several years in a row, IRS-CI took 2nd place, right behind the FBI TAC team members. During the other times, we were always near the top. The accounting nerds consistently showed in the upper end of the competition.</p><p></p><p>Thats a tiny glimps. If anyone has a question or wants further clarification on an IRS-CI issue, I would be happy to provide a real view from a real agent, good or bad. If you want to spout ******** responses, that’s fine also. I know how to scroll on…</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tranger2, post: 4099333, member: 10076"] Just like on any topic, there are some who just spew their thoughts/beliefs without any facts and there are some who appear to research and try to post informed opinions. Good for you. I read these posts and often talk/scream to my screen. I decided to provide my .02 worth. Some will poo poo this and spew their preconceived thoughts and some will honestly take the info, weigh it with their own common sense and give my words whatever credibility they decide. Some information about me so you can see my biases…born Okie, lived here almost 60 years. Brother and nephew are police officers in a big city three hours south. Immediate family members employment includes Federal Bureau of Prisons, Air Marshal, FBI analyst, and my son and several nephews are Jarheads. My brother-in-law lost his legs as a result of a parachute training accident with the Airborne Rangers and is seen often on the Tunnel to Towers commercials for receiving a home. My family tends to suck at the government teat. I come from a religious family with conservative views, stand for the flag, and scream at the TV for silly **** going on in the world today. I was a Special Agent with IRS-Criminal Investigations for 28 years. My comments are all based on working as an agent, never in management, nor serving in Washington, just Oklahoma. I will throw out a few scattered comments for consideration… The IRS operates under Disclosure laws that apply specifically to the agency. Your income tax information CANNOT be shared with others, except for a few exceptions, by law. For instance, YOU can authorize a bank have access to return information. Generally, other federal agencies or law enforcement (police departments included) cannot get your tax return information, they don't have statutory authority. (On limited occasions, an ex-parte order granted by a federal judge can be approved in a criminal investigation but is not common.) Because of disclosure laws, if I were working a straight income tax evasion case, the information cannot be shared to another agency. On these cases, we conducted our own search warrants and arrest warrants just as any other law enforcement agency would. I could be fired and or prosecuted for disclosure, by statute. I know it's hard for you to believe, but most law enforcement agencies do not have forensic accountants available to them. Since most crimes involve money in one way, shape or form, our agents were in high demand if the dollar value of the theft/embezzlement/drug operation/frauds/scams were high enough to reach federal guideline levels. Our jurisdiction in these types of case was investigating money laundering. Follow the money. And that’s what we do. Since we are as involved as the other agency working the case, we carried LEO authority and participate with enforcement activities necessary. When I retired, each agent was issued a Glock 9mm and body armor. Our office had Remington 870 or 1187 shotguns available and S&W .223s. These stayed in the vault and were not issued except for certain enforcement actions. However, we did train with them on a QUARTERLY basis, more than my brother, the Dallas cop (which a sad statement). We went through a lot of ammo on a training day. Sometimes the training consisted of role playing with Sim guns or airsoft guns and occasionally on the FATS machine. The training was always top notch and very professional. For many years, Tinker AFB OSI held a yearly shooting competition for the federal agencies in the state. The competition would generally host 1 to 2 four-man teams per agency. Teams included FBI (who sent their tac team), Secret Service, ATF, DEA, IRS-CI, US Postal Inspectors, BOP, Air Force OSI and some I can’t remember. Several years in a row, IRS-CI took 2nd place, right behind the FBI TAC team members. During the other times, we were always near the top. The accounting nerds consistently showed in the upper end of the competition. Thats a tiny glimps. If anyone has a question or wants further clarification on an IRS-CI issue, I would be happy to provide a real view from a real agent, good or bad. If you want to spout ******** responses, that’s fine also. I know how to scroll on… [/QUOTE]
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