New
law expands IRS surveillance on Americans overseas
A
conservative American attorney who has previously taken cases to the
United State Supreme Court and won says he plans on pursuing a fight
against a new federal tax law expected to go into effect later this
year
5
May, 2014
The
Washington Times reported on
Monday this week that lawyer Jim Bopp is putting in motion a plan to
challenge the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, which
once enacted on July 1 will require foreign banks and other financial
institutions to report to the US government information about
accounts registered to Americans worth more than $50,000.
Earlier
this month, the IRS said it will implement the law throughout a grace
period starting in July and stretching through 2015. Once fully
enforced, however, the US may rely on FATCA to fine foreign
governments who fail to comply, and take as much as 30 percent of
whatever is held in those personal accounts.
According
to reporter Ralph Z. Hallow at The Washington Times, “Foreign
banks are refusing to comply because of the costs resulting from
extra paperwork and labor.”
Bopp doesn’t seem to blame them, and now says he is prepared to
argue against the law all the way to the Supreme Court.
Previously,
Bopp succeeded in getting the high court to strike down elements of
the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 spearheaded by Senators
Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin) and John McCain (R-Arizona). Sen. McCain
is again among the group of lawmakers who advocates in favor of
FATCA, Hallow reported, and Bopp once more hopes to have at least
elements of the law struck down by SCOTUS.
“McCain
seems to think that all Americans abroad are tax cheats, when in fact
they aren’t, and their work overseas is vital to our economy by
promoting the sale of our products around the world," Mr.
Bopp told the Times.
U.S. Senator John McCain (Reuters /
Ints Kalnins)
“FATCA
sanctions provide a powerful, nonmilitary option that, when added to
the other financial sanctions already imposed, could help deter
Russia from continuing its threatening actions against Ukraine,” the
senators wrote in their April 29 letter to Lew.
But
opponents of the bill, including Bopp, say the new tax law is illegal
on multiple grounds. The attorney is attributed with co-founding the
group Republicans Overseas — a political organization for Americans
living and working abroad, according to its website — and since its
incarnation last September has fought to protect the rights of GOP
members outside of the US.
Solomon
Yue, the Republicans Overseas chief operating officer and an Oregon
Republican National Committee member, told the Times that “Seeking
legal rather than legislative remedy on behalf of Americans living
abroad before the scheduled July 1 full implementation of the law is
the only available course for now.”
“The
legal help is on the way since we have three potential constitutional
claims against the FATCA beast that was created in the US, forced
upon other nations and must be brought down in the US justice
system,” he
added.
Indeed,
the Times article outlined the three arguments that Republicans
Overseas hopes to argue all the way to the Supreme Court. According
to the group, the act not only violates the treaty powers provided to
members of the Senate through the US Constitution, but also infringes
on protections against both unusual punishment and the unreasonable
search and seizure of Americans’ financial assets abroad.
“FATCA
violates citizens' right to privacy,” Yue
told the Swiss financial newspaper L'agefi recently.“Personal
financial data transferred from foreign banks to the IRS violates the
Fourth Amendment which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures
without a warrant. However, even living abroad, a US citizen still is
protected by our Constitution.”
“Using
an IGA (Intergovernmental Agreement) between the US government and a
foreign government as a license for a warrantless search is
unconstitutional,” Yue
added. “In
addition, the Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual
punishment. This means that the punishment must be proportionate to
the crime.
Just imagine a retired American citizen who receives his
monthly pension check abroad and the IRS withholds 30 percent of the
check because his foreign bank, through which the fund transfer is
made, is not FATCA compliant? This could happen to a public school
teacher, who taught English and retired abroad. His pension is
managed by a US bank in New York.”
When
asked by L'agefi if there’s a chance his case will make it to
SCOTUS, Yue said that Republicans Overseas “asked
the best constitutional litigator in the US, James Bopp Jr., to
examine this FATCA case and we are waiting for his preliminary legal
opinion on the FATCA law.”
“It
will take time and other lawyers must review the legal opinion. But
what we can already say is that the issue of FATCA is not
closed,” Yue
said.
Even
if FATCA does success, however, others have raised concerns about
whether or not it will even be successful.
"If
the first several months are a disaster, it could lead to calls for
its repeal,"
Villanova
University law professor J. Richard Harvey, told the Wall
Street Journal recently. "By
signaling they will ease enforcement, they are hopefully taking some
of the pressure off the initial implementation."
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