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IRS Boss Snagged Clinton Waiver

Crime/Corruption News Keywords: IRS COMMISSIONER CHARLES ROSSOTTI , AMERICAN MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS , STUART EIZENSTAT
Source: INSIGHT magazine
Published: April 13, 2001 Author: Berlau
Posted on 04/13/2001 11:47:48 PDT by Stand Watch Listen

Charles Rossotti held on to millions of dollars of stock in AMS, which has huge contracts with the IRS, but got a midnight waiver of conflict-of-interest rules from the Clinton team.

Two weeks ago when Insight was reporting potential conflicts of interest involving IRS Commissioner Charles O. Rossotti’s large holdings in a company that does millions of dollars’ worth of business with his own agency (see “A Taxing Dilemma,” April 23), the IRS said not to worry. Rossotti is recused from dealing with the huge government contracts of American Management Systems (AMS), the company that he cofounded and of which he remains the major shareholder, said Frank Keith, the IRS’ national director of communications. “The commissioner has executed a viable and rigorous recusal pro-cess to separate himself from any dealings with AMS,” Keith insisted.

Now Insight has learned that in December 2000 the Clinton administration blew a very large hole in the wall that is supposed to separate Rossotti, whom Clinton appointed as commissioner in 1997, from dealing with his old company. Along with the last-minute pardons and “midnight regulations” that the administration rushed through in its last two months, it also issued a waiver of conflict-of-interest rules that allows Rossotti to participate in decisions that directly could affect the AMS bottom line.

Insight has obtained a copy of that waiver.

Signed on Dec. 11, 2000, by Clinton’s deputy Treasury secretary, Stuart Eizenstat, the waiver allows Rossotti to join in discussions and decisions about the IRS’ Custodial Accounting Project, which uses an automated financial-management system and software provided by AMS. “I have determined that your disqualifying financial interest in the Custodial Accounting Project [CAP], which arises from your ownership interest in American Management Systems Inc. [AMS], is not so substantial as to be deemed likely to affect the integrity of the services that the government may expect to receive from you with respect to the CAP,” Eizenstat wrote. Clinton’s man noted that, without this waiver, federal law “would preclude [Rossotti] from participating in the CAP because certain decisions would have a direct and predictable effect on your financial interest in AMS.”

Eizenstat, now a partner at the hugely powerful Washington law firm of Covington & Burling, did not return Insight’s telephone calls asking why the waiver was necessary.

The conflict-of-interest waiver allows Rossotti to participate in “budget and resource-allocation issues, the prioritization of the CAP and high-level design and architecture issues.” It gives him the power to decide how much money will go to the project and, indirectly, to AMS, say experts.

At press time, the IRS had not returned Insight’s telephone calls for comment about the newly revealed waiver and other issues that have surfaced.

And this is no minor matter, say ethics specialists. Rossotti called the Custodial Accounting Project “critical” to IRS’ ongoing computer-system modernization in testimony to a House subcommittee on April 4. The IRS has asked Congress for $50 million for the project in fiscal 2002 alone. Overall, the Bush administration’s budget gives the IRS an 8 percent funding increase in 2002, double the 4 percent average re-quested for all agencies. The additional funds reflect the computer modernization.

Because so much of this money could flow to AMS — scheduled to be paid more than $17 million this year by the IRS, according to IRS spokesman Keith — some have expressed concern. “I always want to be certain that government officials are avoiding conflicts of interests, but I won’t jump to any conclusions,” Rep. Ernest Istook Jr., R-Okla., chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee that oversees IRS funding, tells Insight through a spokeswoman.

Officials of some of the watchdog groups that insisted Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill divest his $100 million worth of Alcoa stock (see “The $100 Million Misunderstanding,” April 2-9) now say that Rossotti’s situation is more serious than O’Neill’s would have been had he not agreed to sell the stock. “The point there [with Alcoa] was that there was very little the Treasury Department could do that would not impact Alcoa, and I think eventually Secretary O’Neill came around to that conclusion,” says Larry Noble, executive director of the Washington-based Center for Responsive Politics. “I think the same principles apply [to Rossotti], a little bit more directly here in the sense that the IRS is doing business with AMS.”

Charles Lewis, the executive director and founder of the Center for Public Integrity who called strongly for O’Neill to divest, says Rossotti should follow O’Neill’s lead. “If O’Neill should have divested, then clearly this guy should divest,” Lewis tells Insight. “The O’Neill stuff that came up about Alcoa was really speculative about things that might involve Alcoa. This is an instance with Rossotti where the company has direct dealings with the government [agency], and it’s headed by their former chairman. ... This is much more specific, much more real, because this is a direct vendor with the agency, and he’s not taken any of the various steps one would take to create an arms-length distance.”

Lewis also is disturbed that the Clinton-Eizenstat waiver could make the potential for conflict even greater. “Rossotti has gotten a waiver and can in fact be involved in conversations about his old company,” he says. “He clearly has a problem.”

The founder of the Center for Public Integrity worries that “there could be the perception that this company is flourishing because their former chairman is the head of the IRS and that they’re getting favorable treatment inside the IRS.” Lewis also is concerned that Rossotti’s large holdings might tilt IRS employees to favor AMS. “They all know about his association and substantial source of his personal wealth, and that’s not a fact lost on bureaucrats whose job it is to survive and know these things.”

And apparently AMS hasn’t hesitated to throw its weight around the agency. According to Tax Notes, a well-respected weekly journal that covers tax policy, AMS Chairman and then-CEO Paul Brands and other AMS executives met with IRS officials in May and “expressed concern that the IRS was reluctant to procure upgrades and new releases of AMS’ financial software.” The AMS executives accused the IRS officials of being slow to make decisions about purchases of AMS products because Rossotti was commissioner, but did not “provide any specific instances of such actions by IRS personnel,” according to the article written by veteran tax reporter George Guttman.

AMS has not returned Insight’s many phone calls about the Tax Notes article or other matters related to potential or alleged conflicts of interest in these matters.

Lewis admits it’s possible that AMS actually could be getting less-favorable treatment than other IRS vendors because of Rossotti’s millions of dollars worth of holdings, but he thinks that’s unlikely. “I don’t have any evidence of heartrending hardships brought on companies whose executives joined the administration of whichever party,” Lewis says.

Some see the extensions AMS keeps getting to a contract from the late 1980s to provide the IRS with an automated financial system as evidence that it may have been getting special treatment from the agency. The IRS had stressed that the $17 million in one-year contracts the agency signed with AMS last year were “add-ons” to the existing contract and did not violate Rossotti’s pledge to divest if AMS pursued new business with the IRS. But insiders wonder why the IRS keeps buying these add-ons without taking new bids or offers from AMS’ competitors.

“It could be that what they’re doing is extending contracts as a way to get around the problem of issuing new contracts or going out for bids,” says Noble of the Center for Responsive Politics.

Meredith McGehee, senior vice-president of the government-ethics advocacy group Common Cause, says these appearance issues will continue to haunt Rossotti as long as he refuses to divest. “When you have the commissioner of a very high-profile agency holding stock in a company that’s doing business with that agency, obviously it raises concerns,” McGehee tells Insight. Mentioning the allegations of IRS’ hiring of state tax chiefs as a reward for steering business to AMS, McGehee says, “I would not ever be able to tell what the truth is. But the point is the questions are being raised, and having the questions raised is part of what damages the public confidence here.”

Insight meanwhile has learned that John LaFaver, the Kansas secretary of revenue who contracted with AMS and then was hired by Rossotti as the IRS’ deputy commissioner of modernization, has left for the private sector. He recently became vice president for state and local solutions at AMS, which had used his favorable comments about the company in a marketing brochure while noting his status at the IRS. Reached at AMS headquarters in Fairfax, Va., LaFaver tells Insight, “I don’t think I’m going to comment.” He says he doesn’t remember whether he made the endorsement of AMS as Kansas revenue secretary or IRS deputy commissioner.

As Insight previously reported, Karla Pierce, LaFaver’s successor who defended AMS when lawmakers were blaming the company for a rash of late tax refunds and erroneous delinquent notices, recently was hired as director of organizational transformation for the IRS’ modernization project by the agency’s lead contractor, Computer Science Corp. (CSC). After the deadline for Insight’s first article, CSC sent a statement saying that “CSC was impressed by her significant accomplishments as secretary” of revenue in Kansas. But nowhere did the statement deny allegations that Rossotti used input or influence to get Pierce the job.


1 Posted on 04/13/2001 11:47:48 PDT by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen

Nothing to see here - move along...

2 Posted on 04/13/2001 11:51:08 PDT by an amused spectator
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To: Alamo-Girl

Even though there's nothing to see here, you might want to make a note of this. ;-)

3 Posted on 04/13/2001 11:52:09 PDT by an amused spectator
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To: an amused spectator

Here's a link to the referenced Insight article, dated April 23, 2001 (posted on FR March 30, 2001):

Taxing Dilemma (re: Charles O. Rossotti another Clinton holdover-IRS)
Source: INSIGHT magazine; Published: March 30, 2001; Author: John Berlau

4 Posted on 04/13/2001 12:05:56 PDT by Stand Watch Listen
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To: Stand Watch Listen

Throw the criminals out! all of them....

5 Posted on 04/13/2001 12:08:17 PDT by PatrioticAmerican
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To: Stand Watch Listen

Here's a real knee-slapper from Rossotti:

http://cbsnews.com/now/story/0,1597,283404-412,00.shtml

(CBS) The Internal Revenue Service has taken aim at a new group of tax protestors: dozens of small business owners who have stopped withholding taxes from their employees' paychecks.


Their revolt is a direct challenge to the way the U.S. tax system runs; about 70 percent of the taxes the IRS collects is turned in by the nation's employers...

Some businessmen like Al Thompson [...] are challenging the IRS."We're paying a lot of money that we don't need to into a system that is basically extorting money from its citizens, and it's got to stop," says Al Thompson, a small businessman in the movement. He's never broken the law, pays sales and property taxes and has furnished income tax since he was 16. But he's not paying them any more...

The Internal Revenue Service is not taking his [Thompson's]challenge lightly, because growing numbers of small businessmen are doing the same thing. IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti says the agency is going after all of them.

"We are particularly vigilant about employment taxes, because they are so important...and they affect employees as well as taxpayers," Rossotti says. "We do take enforcement action; if necessary we take them to court. And they end up paying not only their taxes but fines...and in some cases going to jail."

This kind of activity has come and gone over the years, but has never taken off, Rossotti says. "It's really a tribute to the common sense of the American taxpayer," he says.

=================================

That Rossotti! What a card!

I can just imagine John Gotti talking about small businessmen in the neighborhoods he owned:

Guys not wanting to pay protection money have come and gone over the years, but the attitude has never taken off, Gotti says. "It's really a tribute to the common sense of the American small businessman," he says.

6 Posted on 04/13/2001 12:21:36 PDT by an amused spectator
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To: Stand Watch Listen

bump

7 Posted on 04/13/2001 12:32:23 PDT by lepton
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To: an amused spectator

So, ummmm... is there any real difference between Rossotti and Gotti?

8 Posted on 04/13/2001 13:04:18 PDT by Darth Sidious
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To: Stand Watch Listen

So there is not much new in an article like this.

It seems pretty much an everyday practice. There could be a little huffing and puffing, then it will go away with KKKlintoons pardons.

9 Posted on 04/13/2001 13:16:27 PDT by biffalobull
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To: Darth Sidious

Gotti forgot to get himself appointed IRS Commissioner. A crucial oversight, as it turned out. ;-)

10 Posted on 04/13/2001 14:32:31 PDT by an amused spectator
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To: an amused spectator

Thanks for the heads up!

11 Posted on 04/13/2001 21:21:35 PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Stand Watch Listen

This is a big surprise. \sarcasm

The IRS invented corruption, Bill Clinton just perfected it.

12 Posted on 04/13/2001 21:25:55 PDT by Hillary_Is_Dating_Tipper
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To: Stand Watch Listen

Speaking of IRS crook Rosetti...

From http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=678

THE IRS IS ON THE ROPES AND RUNNING SCARED!
    Sun Apr 15 00:45:55 2001


    "Pat Shannan's Investigative Reports"

    THE IRS IS ON THE ROPES AND RUNNING SCARED!

    On Thursday a week ago, the Senate conducted a sham hearing purportedly to
    challenge IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti to answer to the provocative ads
    run three times this year in USA Today. C-Span did not cover the hearings.
    But Bob Shultz, Bill Benson, Joe Banister and other courageous individuals
    who had been pictured and quoted in the ads were present in the audience and
    had requested an invitation to speak. They were denied an appearance by
    those conducting this phony probe, apparently out of fear of having to face
    the truth.

    Imagine: Blowups of the ads were posted in the meeting room, Rossotti did
    his normal tapdance, and those who wrote and paid for the ads were anxiously
    sitting right there but were not allowed to tell their side of the story.

    The following Monday, April 9th, more than 1,000 Americans participated in a
    "walkaround" of the IRS Headquarters in Washington, DC, chanting en masse,
    "Show us the Law!" Bill Benson personally challenged Charles Rossotti to
    come out and address the group and show the law that required American
    workers to file a 1040 form. Rossotti, in typical bureaucratic fashion,
    refused to appear.

    Meanwhile, USA Today has decided to censor away any further advertisement
    from We the People, foregoing $62,000 per page. Who got to them? We are
    awaiting a response from the newspaper officials, who have been invited to
    particpate in our radio show.
    "Pat Shannan's Investigative Reports" will delve into it this Sunday evening
    with live interviews from those who were on the scene.


    SEE: www.patshannan.bizland.com
    HEAR: "Pat Shannan's Investigative Reports"
    live every Sunday evening, 8:00pm EST,
    5:00pm PST at www.gcnlive.com
    Your call-in number for questions and comments
    is 1-800-259-9231

    "Oceana Investigations" - shannapat@worldnet.att.net

13 Posted on 04/15/2001 09:44:37 PDT by Michael Rivero
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To: Darth Sidious

"So, ummmm... is there any real difference between Rossotti and Gotti?"

Three consonents and a vowel, looks like.

14 Posted on 04/15/2001 09:46:01 PDT by Michael Rivero
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