Forbes.com: “IRS Chides Collector For Going After Tax Cheat’s E-mail Without A Warrant”

Forbes.com: IRS Chides Collector For Going After Tax Cheat’s E-mail Without A Warrant by Kashmir Hill:

A branch of the IRS in Newark wants to collect $250,000 from a scamster who turned tax day into a pay day by improperly claiming loads of tax credits. (His home office must be the size of New Jersey.) The revenue officer on the case figured out that the shady taxpayer (or taxunpayer, rather) had an e-mail alter ego, so the officer contacted that Internet Service Provider (ISP) for the account and asked for all e-mails from the last two years, hoping to figure out where the money had been sent so that it could be retrieved. The officer may be intimately familiar with the tax code, but seems to be uninformed about electronic privacy laws.

After the ISP, which is not identified in an IRS document describing the case, refused to comply with the request, citing a law marking its 25th birthday this week that requires the gov to have a warrant for e-mails from the last 6 months (though not for e-mails older than that), the officer turned to the IRS general counsel for help. As noted by Forbes contributor Peter Reilly, IRS lawyer William Spatz informed the revenue officer that the ISP knew the law, and that the IRS would be limited in what it could get its hands on due to the “the current controversy concerning the constitutionality under the Fourth Amendment of the SCA [Stored Communications Act].”

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