Whistleblower 972-17W ( 2023 )


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  •                      United States Tax Court
    
    T.C. Memo. 2023-152
    WHISTLEBLOWER 972-17W,
    Petitioner
    v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
    Respondent
    —————
    Docket No. 972-17W.                                        Filed December 21, 2023.
    —————
    George Munoz, for petitioner.
    Ryan Z. Sarazin, Ka Tam, Bartholomew Cirenza, and Stephen C.
    Welker, for respondent.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    TORO, Judge: Petitioner is a whistleblower who reported to the
    Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that several individuals had failed to
    comply with their tax obligations. The Government pursued actions
    against three of the individuals (Targets 1, 2, and 3) (including criminal
    actions with respect to two of the targets) and ultimately collected
    proceeds from each of them. But the IRS Whistleblower Office (WBO)
    denied the whistleblower’s claim for an award under section 7623(b). 1
    The WBO acknowledged to the whistleblower that “[t]he IRS reviewed
    the information you provided as part of an ongoing
    investigation/examination of the taxpayer(s).” Yet, the WBO explained,
    “that review did not result in the assessment of additional tax, penalties,
    1 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the Internal Revenue
    Code, Title 26 U.S.C. (I.R.C.), in effect at all relevant times, regulation references are
    to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect at all relevant times,
    and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    Served 12/21/23
    2
    [*2] interest or other amounts with respect to the issues you raised.”
    The WBO further noted that “[t]he IRS did assess additional tax,
    penalties, interest or additional amounts but the information you
    provided was not relevant to those issues.” The whistleblower timely
    petitioned our Court for review.
    In a previous opinion we resolved certain issues related to our
    jurisdiction and section 6103.       See Whistleblower 972-17W v.
    Commissioner, 
    159 T.C. 1
     (2022) (reviewed). Now before us are two
    motions, a Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the Commissioner of
    Internal Revenue and a Motion to Remand filed by petitioner.
    Essentially, the Motions ask us to decide (1) whether the WBO’s
    determination to deny petitioner’s claim has sufficient support in the
    administrative record and does not represent an abuse of discretion or
    (2) whether the determination should be remanded to the WBO for
    further consideration. For the reasons set out below, we find that the
    record, although imperfect, sufficiently justifies the WBO’s
    determination to deny an award and that the WBO’s decision does not
    reflect an abuse of discretion. Moreover, we see no need for a remand.
    We therefore will grant the Commissioner’s Motion and deny
    petitioner’s Motion.
    Background
    The following facts are derived from the pleadings, the parties’
    Motion papers, the Declarations and Exhibits attached thereto, and the
    administrative record filed with the Court, as supplemented. These
    facts are stated solely for the purpose of ruling on the Motions before us
    and not as findings of fact in this case. See Whistleblower 769-16W v.
    Commissioner, 
    152 T.C. 172
    , 173 (2019).
    I.    Petitioner’s Whistleblower Claims
    During 2008, petitioner was an employee of Company A. At that
    time, the IRS’s Small Business/Self-Employed Division (SB/SE) was
    examining Company A’s failure to pay employment taxes for two tax
    years. An IRS revenue officer, who was part of SB/SE’s collection
    function (Revenue Officer A), had responsibility for Company A’s
    examination.
    On February 27, 2008, Revenue Officer A interviewed petitioner
    in connection with petitioner’s role at Company A. At the interview,
    they discussed issues relating to Company A’s employment tax
    examination.
    3
    [*3] Before the February 27 interview, Revenue Officer A had already
    considered referring Targets 2 and 3 for fraud investigations related to
    issues she had identified during Company A’s examination. (Targets 1,
    2, and 3 were all part of the management team or otherwise involved
    with Company A.) She had scheduled at least one meeting with an IRS
    Fraud Technical Advisor for February 28, 2008, to discuss her concerns
    and was actively investigating the potential fraud. She continued to
    develop the issues after the February 27 interview and had another
    meeting scheduled with the Fraud Technical Advisor when petitioner
    contacted her a few months later, on June 9, 2008, to request a second
    conversation. Revenue Officer A scheduled that conversation for the
    same day as her upcoming meeting with the Fraud Technical Advisor.
    During petitioner’s second meeting with Revenue Officer A,
    petitioner told her that petitioner had resigned from Company A and
    wanted to provide information to show that Targets 2 and 3 were
    committing fraud and not reporting at least $11 million in income.
    Petitioner made some additional comments about Targets 2 and 3,
    including alleging that Target 3 had a practice of buying companies,
    stripping them of assets, and filing for bankruptcy. Revenue Officer A’s
    contemporaneous summary of the meeting states: “I discussed with [the
    Fraud Technical Advisor] who advised me to provide [to petitioner]
    information on recently implemented whistleblower procedures and not
    to accept any records from [petitioner].” It further states: “I advised
    [petitioner] that I cannot accept any information or records from
    [petitioner], and that [petitioner] needs to follow whistleblower
    procedures.”
    On July 1, 2008, the WBO received from petitioner a Form 211,
    Application for Award for Original Information. A letter attached to the
    Form 211 listed the names of seven individuals, including Targets 1, 2,
    and 3. The letter asserted that the seven individuals “executed
    schemes” that “involved tax evasion and fraud,” that “there have been
    numerous violations of Federal tax laws,” and that, “[i]n aggregate,
    premeditated tax fraud by this group runs into the tens of millions of
    dollars.” The letter did not include specific or detailed allegations, but
    rather requested an in-person meeting with the WBO in a specific
    location.
    Also attached to the Form 211 was a second Form 211 executed
    by a different whistleblower. (Petitioner’s letter refers to the other
    whistleblower as “a knowledgeable associate.”) The second Form 211
    named Target 1 and made more specific allegations, including
    4
    [*4] allegations related to “us[ing] ‘shell,’ non reporting, pink sheet
    entities to self deal,” “stock schemes used to avoid taxes,” “erroneous
    returns,” “abuse of expense reporting,” and the use of company money
    to purchase “private items.” 2 Referring to this additional Form 211,
    petitioner’s letter stated that “[t]he included information from [the other
    whistleblower] is endemic of the actions I allege occurred at
    [Company A].”
    On July 8, 2008, petitioner called Revenue Officer A. When she
    returned petitioner’s call, petitioner advised her that the Forms 211 had
    been filed. Revenue Officer A’s contemporaneous summary of the call
    reports that she told petitioner that she could not discuss the matter
    with petitioner.
    Sometime in July or August, and following further discussions
    with the Fraud Technical Advisor, Revenue Officer A referred Targets 2
    and 3 to the IRS’s Criminal Investigation Division (CID) for a potential
    fraud investigation. Unbeknownst to Revenue Officer A, Target 3 had
    already been referred to CID by the IRS’s Large and Mid-Size Business
    division (LMSB), although that investigation was not moving forward
    expeditiously.
    II.    The WBO’s Processing of Petitioner’s Claims
    After receiving petitioner’s claims, the WBO assigned a claim
    number to each of the seven named targets. The WBO initially
    forwarded petitioner’s claims to SB/SE on March 18, 2009, more than
    seven months after petitioner submitted the Form 211 and more than
    six months after Revenue Officer A referred Targets 2 and 3 to CID. But
    SB/SE believed that Target 3 was already being examined by LMSB and
    returned all the claims to the WBO without taking action. The WBO
    then shared the information with LMSB on July 30, 2009. But because
    Targets 2 and 3 were actually under investigation by CID, LMSB also
    returned the information to the WBO without taking action. Finally,
    the WBO sent the claims to CID on September 2, 2009.
    2 In the months after petitioner’s initial Form 211 submission, the other
    whistleblower continued to submit documents to the WBO, primarily regarding
    Target 1. Petitioner did not submit additional documents to the WBO until 2015, as
    we describe further below. Petitioner did, however, have informal discussions with the
    WBO and other IRS personnel, as well as provide documents to IRS personnel outside
    the WBO, as we also describe further below.
    5
    [*5] Over the next year, the WBO corresponded with CID, seeking
    information about whether petitioner’s claims had been useful to its
    investigations and whether further investigations would be opened.
    This information proved difficult to obtain. Eventually, however, after
    numerous emails and phone calls from the WBO, CID confirmed in early
    November 2010 that it was investigating only Targets 2 and 3 and that
    the other targets named in petitioner’s Form 211 could be pursued by
    other divisions of the IRS. CID further provided a Form 11369,
    Confidential Evaluation Report on Claim for Award, pertaining to
    Target 3, with attached memoranda, indicating that petitioner’s
    information was not helpful to its investigations of Targets 2 and 3.
    On November 29, 2010, the WBO referred petitioner’s claims
    (other than those related to Targets 2 and 3) back to SB/SE, informing
    that division that it was free to pursue any appropriate actions against
    those targets (that is, the five individuals other than Targets 2 and 3). 3
    A revised version of the information was sent on January 12, 2011. The
    WBO emphasized that SB/SE should not take any action with respect to
    Targets 2 and 3.
    On May 18, 2011, CID confirmed that the criminal investigation
    of Target 2 had been closed and that other divisions of the IRS could
    proceed against Target 2 if desired. Shortly thereafter, the WBO
    prepared a transmittal memo to refer petitioner’s Target 2 claims back
    to SB/SE.
    III.   IRS Proceedings Against the Targets
    At various times before and after the WBO received petitioner’s
    Form 211 and forwarded the information to operating divisions of the
    IRS, different divisions proceeded with civil and criminal actions related
    to Targets 1, 2, and 3. We detail the actions for each target below,
    including, where relevant, any involvement by the WBO and petitioner.
    A.     Target 1
    Target 1 was a serial nonfiler who did not file federal income tax
    returns from 2003 to 2010. The IRS prepared substitutes for returns for
    most of those years and assessed the tax shown on those returns.
    3 The five individuals included Target 1 and four other individuals against
    whom the IRS took no administrative or judicial action.
    6
    [*6] On January 28, 2011, after the WBO referred petitioner’s claims
    to SB/SE for the second time, petitioner was interviewed by a revenue
    agent regarding Target 1. During the interview, petitioner stated that
    petitioner had no information related to Target 1, but that the other
    whistleblower (the knowledgeable associate referenced in petitioner’s
    Form 211) would be able to provide details. Petitioner explained that
    petitioner was more familiar with the other individuals mentioned in
    the letter petitioner had attached to the Form 211. After recounting an
    innocuous business interaction with Target 1, petitioner again
    confirmed that petitioner had no further details regarding the
    information provided in the other whistleblower’s Form 211, which had
    mostly discussed Target 1.
    Target 1’s collection case was assigned to Revenue Officer A on
    September 27, 2011. Revenue Officer A ultimately obtained delinquent
    returns from Target 1 for tax years 2003 to 2011 and referred the
    returns for 2009 and 2010 to another agent for processing and
    examination. After consulting with Revenue Officer A, the agent
    determined that an in-depth examination of the returns was
    unwarranted because Target 1 already had a large outstanding liability
    (more than $430,000) from the delinquent returns, and Revenue
    Officer A had determined that collection potential was limited.
    Accordingly, the agent conducted a limited scope examination and, in
    August 2012, proposed increases in tax, penalties, and interest for 2009
    and 2010 of $29,754 and $15,931, respectively.          For 2009, the
    adjustments generally related to gross receipts not reported on
    Schedule C, Profit or Loss From Business, that the agent identified after
    interviewing Target 1 and performing a bank deposits analysis. For
    2010, the adjustments related to the disallowance of deductions for a
    loan made to another business and certain business expenses. Target 1
    agreed with the adjustments.
    On October 9, 2012, the agent who conducted the examination of
    Target 1 prepared Form 11369 recommending that petitioner receive no
    award. The form recounted the history described above and further
    stated that petitioner’s information was not useful to the examination,
    that petitioner had provided no documents or contact information, and
    7
    [*7] that petitioner did not specifically identify the sources of the
    unreported income that Target 1 had allegedly received. 4
    Attached to the Form 11369 was a memorandum prepared by
    Revenue Officer A describing her own involvement in the case. Revenue
    Officer A reported that the information petitioner provided to the WBO
    was never shared with her as it was several years old. She further
    stated that she had declined to receive the information because, in her
    view, it would not have been relevant or helpful to her collection case.
    B.      Target 2
    In connection with Company A’s employment tax examination,
    the IRS ultimately assessed trust fund recovery penalties totaling
    approximately $577,000 against Target 2, plus interest. On or around
    June 6, 2008 (i.e., before petitioner met with Revenue Officer A for a
    second time or filed the Form 211 with the WBO), Revenue Officer A
    “[m]ailed [a] completed [trust fund recovery penalties] package to Tech
    Advisory” and sent Target 2 a Letter 1058, Notice of Intent to Levy, with
    respect to Target 2’s personal liability for the trust fund penalties.
    Revenue Officer A retained responsibility for collection actions with
    respect to the trust fund penalties assessed against Target 2.
    During the employment tax examination, Revenue Officer A also
    determined that Target 2 had regularly written large checks from
    Company A to Target 2 and failed to report the corresponding income on
    federal income tax returns. Additionally, Revenue Officer A determined
    that Target 2 had not filed a federal income tax return for other years.
    Accordingly, as already discussed, Revenue Officer A made a criminal
    referral to CID relating to Target 2 sometime in July or August 2008.
    In addition to confirming Revenue Officer A’s findings, CID’s
    initial investigation of Target 2 revealed that Target 2 may have
    prepared tax returns for another individual that did not report more
    than $30 million of income.         CID formally opened a criminal
    investigation of Target 2 to determine any potential tax violations
    related to these actions and those Revenue Officer A had identified.
    4 With regard to certain supplemental materials (stock certificates, a
    promissory note signed by Target 1, and a deposition given by Target 1) the other
    whistleblower submitted to the WBO, the Form 11369 stated that the documents
    indicated a source of income but that, because Target 1 reported substantial income on
    the relevant returns, it was likely that the target had reported the income.
    8
    [*8] After a CID agent interviewed Target 2, Target 2 filed amended
    tax returns reporting the previously omitted income from Company A
    that Revenue Officer A had identified. Target 2 also filed the tax returns
    that Target 2 had previously failed to file. Once Target 2 took these
    actions, CID discontinued its investigation in April 2010 because of
    concerns about jury appeal. Nevertheless, on June 30, 2010, CID
    proceeded with an interview it had scheduled with petitioner regarding
    Target 2. At the interview, petitioner provided certain information
    regarding Target 2’s history with Target 3, Company A, and another
    company that Company A had acquired. Petitioner also relayed certain
    allegations of misconduct against Target 2. After the interview,
    petitioner provided contact information for certain individuals
    connected with Target 2 or Company A. Petitioner also called a CID
    agent after the investigation was closed to make further allegations
    against Target 2 and Target 3 related to a separate company
    (Company C). The CID agent was not able to investigate these claims.
    On August 14, 2012, SB/SE opened an examination of Target 2’s
    tax returns for 2009 and 2010. SB/SE ultimately identified unreported
    income of $5,700 for 2009 and $3,705 for 2010. These amounts generally
    were fees Target 2 received for preparing tax returns for clients in the
    relevant years. SB/SE disallowed an exemption of $3,650 claimed for
    Target 2’s child, who was over 18. Target 2 agreed with the proposed
    adjustments, and the examination was closed.
    The agent who conducted the examination of Target 2’s returns
    provided to the WBO a Form 11369 with a narrative attachment. In the
    attachment, the agent stated that petitioner did not make specific
    allegations regarding Target 2 or provide any specific information that
    assisted with her examination.
    C.     Target 3
    Target 3 initially came to the IRS’s attention as early as 2005,
    when CID opened an investigation of Target 3’s activities. But this
    investigation had not led to any charges by 2008.
    Eventually, in connection with the employment tax examination
    of Company A, the IRS ultimately assessed trust fund penalties and
    interest totaling more than $1 million against Target 3. On or around
    June 6, 2008 (i.e., before petitioner met with Revenue Officer A for a
    second time or filed Form 211 with the WBO), Revenue Officer A
    “[m]ailed [a] completed [trust fund recovery penalties] package to Tech
    9
    [*9] Advisory” and sent Target 3 a Letter 1058, with respect to
    Target 3’s personal liability for the trust fund penalties.
    CID received an IRS Collection Referral relating to Target 3
    sometime in July or August 2008, stemming from Revenue Officer A’s
    examination of Company A. The CID agent who received the referral
    (CID Special Agent A) determined that Target 3 had received several
    million dollars of dividends from Company B and that Company B had
    not filed corporate income tax returns for several years. Following these
    findings, CID started a criminal investigation of the new claims related
    to Target 3.
    During the ensuing investigation, CID Special Agent A reviewed
    the Form 211 petitioner submitted to the WBO, met with petitioner
    multiple times, and received certain documents from petitioner. These
    documents included an organization chart showing entities and
    individuals linked to Target 3, various corporate filings by entities
    linked to Target 3, and printouts of online forum discussions regarding
    alleged wrongdoing by Target 3 and other individuals, including Targets
    1 and 2. Many of the documents related to an entirely different company
    (Company C); they generally did not relate to Company A (where
    petitioner worked) or Company B (the focus of CID’s investigation). The
    documents also included one canceled check for $350,000, apparently
    executed by Target 3, that the agent labeled a “Diverted Check.” The
    record includes a few pages of handwritten notes CID Special Agent A
    made during his meetings with petitioner.
    In September and November 2010, CID Special Agent A told the
    WBO that petitioner’s information had not assisted with his ongoing
    investigation. In addition to conveying this point via email, he also
    submitted a Form 11369. In an attached narrative the agent said that
    the investigation was started independently of petitioner’s information
    and that contacts with petitioner did not provide any supporting
    evidence. He elaborated that petitioner did not have first-hand
    knowledge of or work at the company that was the primary focus of the
    investigation (Company B).
    Target 3 ultimately was charged with various tax-related
    offenses. Target 3 was tried and convicted in 2012 and, by mid-2013,
    had been sentenced. Specifically, Target 3 was convicted of corrupt
    interference with the internal revenue laws, multiple counts of failure
    to file a corporate tax return, and two counts of failure to file a personal
    tax return. Target 3 was sentenced to a period of imprisonment and
    10
    [*10] ordered to pay restitution to the IRS. The IRS assessed almost
    $60 million in connection with Target 3’s conviction, although the record
    does not disclose how much of this amount has been collected to date.
    IV.   Petitioner’s Supplemental         Information   and   the    WBO’s
    Determination
    In 2013, petitioner obtained legal representation to handle the
    WBO claims. By 2015, petitioner still had not heard from the WBO, and
    that year petitioner’s counsel made a series of written submissions to
    the WBO, requesting an update on petitioner’s claims and explaining
    why petitioner was entitled to an award. The supplemental information
    shared with the WBO included an affidavit from petitioner. The
    affidavit recounted some of the history described above and described
    petitioner’s meetings with CID to discuss Target 3. The affidavit further
    stated that, shortly after these meetings began, Target 1 contacted
    petitioner and angrily yelled at petitioner for reporting Target 1 and
    others to the IRS. Petitioner reported this interaction to CID Special
    Agent A, and the agent told petitioner to let him know if it happened
    again. The affidavit expressed petitioner’s view that the information
    and cooperation petitioner gave to Revenue Officer A and CID agents
    had allowed the IRS to proceed with various actions against Targets 1,
    2, and 3. Attached to the affidavit were supporting documents,
    including business cards from IRS agents petitioner had spoken to, the
    organization chart petitioner provided to CID regarding Target 3 and
    related entities, various public records regarding tax liens the IRS had
    recorded against the targets, and records related to Target 3’s conviction
    and sentencing. In another submission, petitioner provided several
    news articles relating to Target 3 and a draft “Preliminary Award
    Memorandum” with proposed facts that petitioner thought supported a
    positive award determination.
    On October 17, 2016, the WBO issued a preliminary denial letter
    to petitioner that proposed to deny all petitioner’s claims for an award.
    Petitioner’s counsel sent a response to the WBO on November 14, 2016.
    The response reiterated information from petitioner’s 2015 letters,
    alleged that CID Special Agent A had continued to encourage petitioner
    to provide information up to 2012, and alleged that petitioner had
    provided Revenue Officer A helpful information that had allowed the
    IRS to collect from Targets 1 and 2 (for example, information regarding
    the location of assets).
    11
    [*11] On December 5, 2016, a WBO analyst completed a memorandum
    recommending that petitioner’s claims be denied. Regarding Target 1,
    the memorandum generally stated that petitioner’s information had not
    identified the sources of Target 1’s alleged unreported consulting income
    and was not useful to the SB/SE examination. Regarding Target 2, the
    memorandum generally stated that SB/SE’s collection personnel had
    already initiated proceedings against Target 2 before petitioner
    submitted any information, that CID had ultimately dropped its
    investigation of Target 2, and that Revenue Officer A, who was handling
    the collections action, had never reviewed the Form 211 information
    regarding Target 2. Regarding Target 3, the memorandum generally
    stated that CID had already opened an investigation of Target 3 before
    receiving petitioner’s information and that the information did not
    assist CID with any existing investigations or with any new
    investigations.
    On December 13, 2016, the WBO issued its final determination
    letter denying all of petitioner’s claims for an award and making the
    observations we set out at the beginning of this Opinion.
    Discussion
    I.    Summary Judgment Standard in Whistleblower Cases
    The purpose of summary judgment is to expedite litigation and
    avoid costly, time-consuming, and unnecessary trials. Fla. Peach Corp.
    v. Commissioner, 
    90 T.C. 678
    , 681 (1988). Under Rule 121(a)(2), which
    articulates the general standard for evaluating a summary judgment
    motion, we may grant summary judgment when there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and a decision may be rendered as a
    matter of law. See Sundstrand Corp. v. Commissioner, 
    98 T.C. 518
    , 520
    (1992), aff’d, 
    17 F.3d 965
     (7th Cir. 1994). But this standard “is not
    generally apt” when reviewing whistleblower award determinations
    because, in such a case, there is no trial on the merits. Van Bemmelen
    v. Commissioner, 
    155 T.C. 64
    , 78–79 (2020). Rather, in a whistleblower
    case, where we review agency action under the Administrative
    Procedure Act, we generally “confine ourselves to the administrative
    record to decide whether there has been an abuse of discretion.” Id.
    at 78.
    Our rules recognize this distinction, clarifying that in cases in
    which judicial review is based solely on the administrative record,
    Rule 121(a)(2) does not apply, and the parties must provide
    12
    [*12] “statement[s] of facts with references to the administrative
    record.” Rule 121(j). In this context, summary judgment serves as a
    mechanism for deciding, as a matter of law, whether the agency action
    is supported by the administrative record, or whether the WBO’s
    determination was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
    otherwise not in accordance with law.” Van Bemmelen, 155 T.C. at 72
    (quoting Kasper v. Commissioner, 
    150 T.C. 8
    , 21 (2018)). In conducting
    this analysis, we do not substitute our judgment for that of the agency,
    but instead confine ourselves to ensuring that its determination was
    “within the bounds of reasoned decisionmaking.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Dep’t of
    Com. v. New York, 
    139 S. Ct. 2551
    , 2569 (2019)). With respect to factual
    matters, this includes accepting the agency’s determinations so long as
    they are not clearly erroneous. See Kasper, 150 T.C. at 23 (citing Fargo
    v. Commissioner, 
    447 F.3d 706
    , 709 (9th Cir. 2006), aff’g 
    T.C. Memo. 2004-13
    ).
    II.   Section 7623
    Section 7623 provides for awards to individuals (commonly
    referred to as whistleblowers) who submit information to the
    Government about third parties who have underpaid their taxes or
    otherwise violated the internal revenue laws.           Section 7623(a)
    authorizes discretionary payments in certain circumstances, while
    section 7623(b) provides for nondiscretionary (i.e., mandatory) awards.
    A.     Mandatory Awards
    Under section 7623(b)(1), a whistleblower generally is entitled to
    a mandatory award if the Secretary of the Treasury proceeds with an
    administrative or judicial action based on information provided by the
    whistleblower and collects proceeds as a result of the action. 5 The
    amount of the award generally is between 15% and 30% of the collected
    5       Sec. 7623(b)(1). In general.—If the Secretary proceeds with
    any administrative or judicial action described in subsection (a) based
    on information brought to the Secretary’s attention by an individual,
    such individual shall, subject to paragraph (2), receive as an award at
    least 15 percent but not more than 30 percent of the proceeds collected
    as a result of the action (including any related actions) or from any
    settlement in response to such action (determined without regard to
    whether such proceeds are available to the Secretary). The
    determination of the amount of such award by the Whistleblower Office
    shall depend upon the extent to which the individual substantially
    contributed to such action.
    13
    [*13] proceeds, depending on the extent to which the whistleblower
    substantially contributed to the action. I.R.C. § 7623(b)(1).
    Regulations under section 7623 provide guidance in interpreting
    the statutory standard. As relevant here, the regulations define an
    “administrative action” as “all or a portion of an [IRS] civil or criminal
    proceeding against any person that may result in collected proceeds . . .
    including, for example, an examination, a collection proceeding, a status
    determination proceeding, or a criminal investigation.” 
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7623-2
    (a)(2) (emphasis added). Similarly, a “judicial action”
    means “all or a portion of a proceeding against any person in any court
    that may result in collected proceeds.” 
    Id.
     subpara. (3). The regulations
    further state that the IRS proceeds based on a whistleblower’s
    information
    when the information provided substantially contributes to
    an action against a person identified by the whistleblower.
    For example, the IRS proceeds based on the information
    provided when the IRS initiates a new action, expands the
    scope of an ongoing action, or continues to pursue an
    ongoing action, that the IRS would not have initiated,
    expanded the scope of, or continued to pursue, but for the
    information provided. The IRS does not proceed based on
    information when the IRS analyzes the information
    provided or investigates a matter raised by the information
    provided.
    
    Id.
     para. (b)(1).
    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
    recently upheld and clarified this standard in Lissack v. Commissioner,
    
    68 F.4th 1312
     (D.C. Cir. 2023), aff’g 
    157 T.C. 63
     (2021), petition for cert.
    filed, No. 23-413 (Oct. 19, 2023). In relevant part, the D.C. Circuit held
    that, for a whistleblower to be entitled to an award under the regulation,
    the IRS must take “action on the discrete tax issue or issues the
    whistleblower’s information identifies.” Id. at 1324. To show that the
    IRS proceeded with an administrative action based on a whistleblower’s
    information, therefore, the whistleblower must do more than establish
    that the IRS opened an examination based on the information.
    Demonstrating this kind of “but for” cause is insufficient because, in the
    D.C. Circuit’s words, “there is ample reason to doubt that Congress
    meant to entitle whistleblowers to substantial awards just for raising
    plausible but meritless concerns about taxpayers who, on investigation
    14
    [*14] by the IRS, turn out to be noncompliant in some other, unrelated
    way.” Id. Instead, whistleblowers must “identify underpayments and
    provide information that advances to some substantial degree the IRS’s
    recovery of those underpayments.” Id. Put another way, for a
    whistleblower to be entitled to an award, the whistleblower’s
    information must substantially contribute to the portion of an
    examination that results in the collection of proceeds. See id.; see also
    
    Treas. Reg. § 301.7623-2
    (b)(2) (examples 2 and 3).
    B.       Judicial Review
    If, as in this case, the IRS proceeds with administrative or judicial
    action against one or more targets identified by a whistleblower and the
    WBO ultimately declines to grant an award, then the whistleblower may
    petition our Court for review of the WBO’s determination, and we have
    jurisdiction to review the determination. See I.R.C. § 7623(b)(4); Lissack
    v. Commissioner, 68 F.4th at 1321; Whistleblower 972-17W, 159 T.C.
    at 9. We have already resolved the jurisdictional issues in this case and
    do not repeat that analysis here. See Whistleblower 972-17W, 159 T.C.
    at 7–11. Instead, we turn to the merits.
    III.   Analysis
    A.      Target 1
    The amounts assessed by the IRS against Target 1 consist of
    (1) amounts Target 1 reported on delinquent returns secured by
    Revenue Officer A and (2) amounts assessed after the limited scope
    examination of Target 1’s 2009 and 2010 returns. We see no abuse of
    discretion by the WBO with respect to either category.
    To begin, petitioner’s Form 211 contained no specific allegations
    regarding Target 1. It did not allege that Target 1 had failed to file tax
    returns, nor did it allege that Target 1 had failed to report income or
    erroneously deducted business expenses. 6 When the IRS interviewed
    petitioner regarding Target 1 in 2011, petitioner stated that petitioner
    had no information regarding Target 1. Additionally, the record
    6 Even if we were to attribute the information in the second whistleblower’s
    Form 211 to petitioner, our conclusion would not change. Nearly all the allegations in
    that form were unrelated to the adjustments the IRS ultimately made. And to the
    extent the form alleged that Target 1 had failed to report income, it did not provide
    specific information that could have substantially contributed to the IRS’s
    assessments.
    15
    [*15] includes a fairly detailed account of the examination of Target 1’s
    2009 and 2010 returns, and there is no indication that petitioner
    contributed to the examination. Both the revenue agent who handled
    Target 1’s examination and Revenue Officer A confirmed that they did
    not use petitioner’s information in their actions related to Target 1.
    In view of these facts, we see no abuse of discretion because the
    record supports the WBO’s determination with respect to Target 1 and
    the WBO’s determination was within the bounds of reasoned
    decisionmaking. Petitioner does not appear to dispute this conclusion,
    as neither petitioner’s Response to the Commissioner’s Motion for
    Summary Judgment (Response) nor petitioner’s Motion to Remand
    discusses Target 1.
    B.      Target 2
    The amounts assessed by the IRS against Target 2 consist of
    (1) trust fund penalties and interest related to Company A’s employment
    tax examination and (2) modest amounts assessed after the examination
    of Target 2’s 2009 and 2010 returns. 7
    Taking the trust fund penalties first, petitioner does not appear
    to argue that petitioner’s information contributed to the outcome of the
    IRS’s examination of Company A. Moreover, the record contains no
    indication that petitioner’s whistleblower information substantially
    contributed to that examination. The examination was initiated before
    petitioner provided any information to the IRS, and Revenue Officer A’s
    examination activity record indicates that, before her second meeting
    with petitioner, Revenue Officer A had already “[m]ailed [a] completed
    [trust fund recovery penalties] package to Tech Advisory” and sent
    Target 2 a Letter 1058 with respect to Target 2’s personal liability for
    7 We need not address whether the amounts Target 2 voluntarily reported and
    paid after being approached by CID could qualify as collected proceeds because the
    record indicates that those amounts, as well as Target 2’s failure to file returns, were
    discovered by the IRS without petitioner’s assistance. (Nor does petitioner appear to
    argue that we should consider those amounts.) For example, Revenue Officer A’s
    examination activity record indicates that she had identified Target 2’s unreported
    income and discussed it with the Fraud Technical Advisor by the day after her first
    meeting with petitioner. And Revenue Officer A’s detailed notes summarizing her first
    two meetings with petitioner (in February and June 2008) contain no allegations that
    Target 2 had failed to file income tax returns and no specific allegations that Target 2
    had failed to report income. Finally, at her second meeting with petitioner, Revenue
    Officer A informed petitioner that she could not accept any information or records from
    petitioner.
    16
    [*16] the trust fund penalties. Moreover, the record does not suggest
    that any information petitioner ultimately provided as a whistleblower
    related to Company A’s employment tax liabilities or Target 2’s potential
    responsibility for those amounts.
    Similarly, the record contains significant information about the
    examination of Target 2’s 2009 and 2010 returns, and there is no
    indication that petitioner’s information was at all helpful to that
    examination. Nor has petitioner alleged that petitioner’s information
    related to the adjustments made in the examination, which concerned
    unreported fees Target 2 received by preparing income tax returns and
    a disallowed tax exemption Target 2 claimed with respect to Target 2’s
    adult child.
    Again, petitioner does not appear to dispute these conclusions.
    The only argument petitioner’s Response makes specifically with
    respect to Target 2 is that a document in the administrative record
    states Target 2 “was not under examination until [petitioner’s] Form 211
    was received and processed.” Pet’r’s Resp. ¶ 6. Petitioner’s Response
    also states that petitioner knew Target 2 and the companies Target 2
    “used in committing tax fraud” well. Id.
    Petitioner’s first statement is demonstrably true—SB/SE opened
    its examination of Target 2’s 2009 and 2010 tax returns on August 14,
    2012, after the WBO referred petitioner’s claims to SB/SE for the second
    time. And petitioner’s second statement may also be true. But under
    Lissack, neither statement is sufficient to entitle petitioner to an award.
    As the D.C. Circuit explained, it is not enough for a whistleblower’s
    claim to be a “but for” cause of the IRS opening an examination, or for a
    whistleblower to provide background information about a target.
    Lissack v. Commissioner, 68 F.4th at 1324. Instead, the whistleblower
    must “identify underpayments and provide information that advances
    to some substantial degree the IRS’s recovery of those underpayments.”
    Id. And, as already discussed, there is no indication in the record, nor
    does petitioner allege, that petitioner’s information related to the
    unreported tax preparation fees or the disallowed tax exemption that
    gave rise to the adjustments in the examination of Target 2’s returns.
    Thus, with respect to Target 2, we again see no abuse of
    discretion.
    17
    [*17] C.       Target 3
    The amounts assessed by the IRS with respect to Target 3 consist
    of (1) trust fund penalties and interest totaling more than $1 million,
    apparently related to Company A’s employment tax examination, and
    (2) tax, interest, and penalties totaling almost $60 million ordered as
    restitution following Target 3’s criminal conviction. With respect to the
    trust fund penalties, the WBO’s determination does not constitute an
    abuse of discretion for the same reasons described in our discussion of
    Target 2 above. See supra Discussion Part III.B. With respect to the
    restitution amounts, we find no abuse of discretion for the reasons
    below.
    First, the record does not indicate that petitioner’s information
    caused Revenue Officer A to refer Target 3 to CID. As already discussed,
    Revenue Officer A was pursuing a fraud referral and a meeting with a
    Fraud Technical Advisor before petitioner provided her with any
    information related to Target 3. 8 According to Revenue Officer A’s
    notes, petitioner made no allegations against Target 3 at their first
    meeting. At their second meeting, petitioner alleged that Target 3 had
    a practice of buying companies, stripping them of assets, and filing for
    bankruptcy. But these allegations had nothing to do with the issues
    Revenue Officer A was developing and, after petitioner made the
    allegations, Revenue Officer A told petitioner that she could not accept
    any information or records and that petitioner should file a
    whistleblower claim. Petitioner took her advice and filed a claim a few
    weeks later, but that claim contained no specific allegations related to
    Revenue Officer A’s work. Moreover, she did not review it.
    Following the referral to CID, Target 3 was investigated and
    ultimately convicted of corrupt interference with the internal revenue
    laws, multiple counts of failure to file a corporate tax return, and two
    counts of failure to file a personal tax return. The convictions for failing
    to file corporate tax returns related to corporations other than
    Company A and Company C.
    As best we can tell, none of the information petitioner provided
    substantially contributed to the convictions the IRS ultimately secured.
    For example, we see no allegation in petitioner’s information that
    Target 3 failed to file individual income tax returns. And the
    8 We note that the record includes only the pages from Revenue Officer A’s case
    activity notes that mention petitioner (9 pages out of a total of at least 198 pages).
    18
    [*18] corporations named in the indictment for which Target 3 failed to
    file corporate tax returns are mentioned in petitioner’s information only
    briefly—for example, they are included in an organization chart and on
    a list that reflect some of the many corporations with which Target 3
    had dealings. Additionally, publicly available filings (e.g., articles of
    incorporation and annual reports) for one of the corporations are
    included in petitioner’s information. But nearly all of petitioner’s
    information relates to other companies. And nowhere in the documents
    petitioner provided are there any specific allegations of wrongdoing (or
    evidence of such) that appear related to the corporations or to Target 3’s
    convictions.
    This observation is consistent with the Form 11369 CID Special
    Agent A prepared. In a memorandum attached to the Form 11369, the
    agent stated that that his investigation was started independent of
    petitioner’s information and that contacts with petitioner did not
    provide any evidence assisting the investigation. He elaborated that
    petitioner did not have first-hand knowledge of or work at the company
    that was the primary focus of the investigation. We see nothing in the
    record that refutes these contentions—indeed the record (including the
    supplementing materials added at petitioner’s request) supports them.
    We therefore conclude that it was not an abuse of discretion for the WBO
    to deny petitioner’s claim for an award with respect to Target 3.
    Petitioner’s primary objection to this conclusion is that, in
    petitioner’s view, the administrative record, as supplemented by
    testimony from Target 3’s trial and Revenue Officer A’s activity report,
    suggests that it was petitioner’s information that caused Revenue
    Officer A to refer Target 3 to CID and ultimately led to Target 3’s
    conviction.      Thus, petitioner contends, summary judgment is
    inappropriate because material facts are in dispute regarding
    petitioner’s role in the actions against Target 3. But these arguments
    fail for several reasons.
    1.     Referral to CID
    As we have discussed, we disagree with petitioner’s reading of the
    record. Contrary to petitioner’s contentions, a close reading of Revenue
    Officer A’s notes strongly suggests that she was investigating potential
    fraud by Targets 2 and 3 before she ever spoke to petitioner. And the
    notes further reflect that, in the two meetings petitioner had with
    Revenue Officer A before filing Form 211, petitioner did not provide any
    information that substantially contributed to her investigation of the
    19
    [*19] fraud issue. In fact, at their second meeting, Revenue Officer A
    told petitioner that she could not accept any records or information
    related to petitioner’s fraud allegations, and that petitioner should file
    a whistleblower claim.
    Additionally, under the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Lissack,
    petitioner would not prevail even if we were to assume that
    (1) petitioner’s information caused Revenue Officer A to refer Target 3
    to CID and (2) CID opened the investigation of Target 3 because of the
    referral. As the D.C. Circuit explained, this kind of “but for” causation
    would be insufficient to entitle petitioner to an award because, as
    discussed above, the record does not support that petitioner’s
    information substantially contributed to developing the specific issues
    that led to Target 3’s convictions. See Lissack v. Commissioner, 68 F.4th
    at 1324.
    2.     Summary Judgment Standard
    Petitioner’s position in response is that the administrative record
    is incomplete and does not show the extent of petitioner’s contribution
    to the investigation of Target 3. Therefore, petitioner argues, there is a
    dispute of material fact regarding petitioner’s information that
    precludes summary judgment.
    But, as the Commissioner correctly points out, petitioner’s
    argument mischaracterizes the relevant standard. As we have said, in
    cases where we review the administrative record for abuse of discretion,
    the normal summary judgment standard is not apt. Instead, summary
    judgment serves as a mechanism for deciding, as a matter of law,
    whether the agency action is supported by the administrative record, or
    whether the WBO’s determination was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
    of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” Van Bemmelen,
    155 T.C. at 72 (quoting Kasper, 150 T.C. at 21); see also Rule 121(j).
    In petitioner’s Motion to Remand and in the Response, petitioner
    repeatedly points to alleged inadequacies in the administrative record
    and argues that they preclude us from ruling in the Commissioner’s
    favor. Petitioner contends, among other things, that notes taken by CID
    agents during meetings with petitioner are missing from the record, that
    interrogatory responses provided by the Commissioner do not meet the
    20
    [*20] requirements of Rule 71, 9 and that further fact-finding (including
    witness testimony either at trial 10 or on remand) is needed given various
    discrepancies and indications that documents relevant to petitioner’s
    claims were destroyed by the IRS.
    We view these arguments as essentially contending that the
    administrative record here is incomplete. But the Court provided
    petitioner more than ample opportunities to demonstrate that the record
    should be supplemented.         And in fact the Court ordered the
    supplementation of the record. Petitioner’s current claims that the
    record should be supplemented yet again are unavailing in view of the
    procedural history of this case. Petitioner strategically gave up any
    efforts to add certain materials to the administrative record in exchange
    for the Commissioner’s agreement to add certain other materials to the
    administrative record.
    Specifically, petitioner previously filed a Motion to Compel
    Discovery (Doc. 79) that raised many of the same points raised in
    petitioner’s recent filings. In the Motion to Compel, petitioner requested
    that the Court issue various orders to address holes and discrepancies
    petitioner perceived in the record. Petitioner, however, subsequently
    elected to withdraw the Motion to Compel in exchange for the
    Commissioner’s agreement that testimony from Target 3’s trial could be
    added to the administrative record. 11 We accepted the parties’
    9 The interrogatory responses indicate, among other things, that petitioner
    visited Revenue Officer A several times after she closed Company A’s employment tax
    examination, that petitioner sometimes provided her with documents relating to
    Targets 1, 2, and 3 at these meetings, and that Revenue Officer A shredded the
    documents without taking any further action. They also indicate that the criminal
    investigation file for Target 2 was prematurely destroyed by the IRS after the
    investigation was closed. Petitioner argues that the failure of the interrogatory
    responses to comply with Rule 71 prevents the Commissioner from relying on them.
    We note that the interrogatory responses were not made part of the administrative
    record. Moreover, we would reach the same result in this case regardless of whether
    or not we considered the interrogatory responses. Although we do not approve of the
    steps Revenue Officer A took with respect to the documents petitioner submitted, her
    actions suggest she did not view the information as aiding the IRS’s efforts in the
    relevant proceedings.
    10 As we have said, in a “record rule” whistleblower case, there is no trial on
    the merits. Van Bemmelen, 155 T.C. at 79.
    11 Petitioner relies on the trial testimony to show CID Special Agent A was not
    actively pursuing Target 3 until he received the fraud referral from Revenue Officer A.
    We accept this point as true. But the trial testimony does not establish that
    21
    [*21] agreement in this regard and implemented the agreement in an
    Order served April 14, 2023.
    Having made this strategic decision, petitioner cannot now be
    heard to complain about a purported incompleteness of the
    administrative record. We of course consider any inadequacies in the
    record as part of our analysis of the merits, but we do not require a
    perfect record to reach a decision. Reviewing for whether there was an
    abuse of discretion, we decide whether the record before us, as
    supplemented, adequately supports the WBO’s determination. And the
    standard we apply is a deferential one: we confine ourselves to ensuring
    that the WBO’s determination was “within the bounds of reasoned
    decisionmaking,” Van Bemmelen, 155 T.C. at 72 (quoting Dep’t of Com.,
    139 S. Ct. at 2569), which includes accepting the WBO’s factual
    determinations so long as they are not clearly erroneous, see Kasper, 150
    T.C. at 23.
    The record in this case adequately supports the WBO’s
    determination. Petitioner is correct that the record is not perfect. But
    it is good enough. While we have already explained our reasoning with
    respect to each of the targets, for completeness, we will again review
    below petitioner’s key areas of disagreement with the Commissioner.
    Consider first the excerpts from Revenue Officer A’s case activity
    record. Petitioner’s Motion and the Response make much of these
    documents, using a few key quotations to argue that petitioner’s
    information was critical to starting the criminal investigations of
    Targets 2 and 3. But upon closer inspection, the excerpts show that
    Revenue Officer A had progressed far in her work, including with
    respect to fraud referrals for Targets 2 and 3, before she ever spoke to
    petitioner. And aside from nonspecific allegations petitioner made
    orally at their early meetings, the excerpts further suggest that Revenue
    Officer A did not accept any evidence from petitioner relating to
    potential fraud before she referred Targets 2 and 3 to CID. Instead, she
    encouraged petitioner to provide evidence to the WBO.
    Similarly, the record includes all the documents petitioner
    provided to CID Special Agent A that were retained in Target 3’s
    criminal file. The documents support petitioner’s claims that petitioner
    met with CID Special Agent A and provided information with the desire
    petitioner’s information caused the referral. And, even assuming for the sake of
    analysis that it did, under Lissack v. Commissioner, 68 F.4th at 1324, petitioner still
    would not be entitled to an award, as we discuss further below.
    22
    [*22] of assisting in the investigation of Target 3. But as a substantive
    matter, the documents appear only tangentially related to the
    convictions the IRS ultimately secured. It is not evident how anything
    in the documents would have contributed substantially to the
    convictions. Indeed, most of the documents discuss entities and
    transactions that appear entirely unrelated to the convictions. 12
    Even now, although petitioner alleges that petitioner spoke to
    IRS agents numerous times, that the agents were eager to speak with
    petitioner and solicited petitioner’s help, and that petitioner provided
    useful information to them, petitioner is unable to articulate what
    specific information petitioner provided to the IRS that would have
    substantially contributed to any of the assessments the IRS ultimately
    made. The closest petitioner comes to such an assertion is pointing to a
    chart petitioner provided to CID Special Agent A, identifying entities
    and individuals connected with Target 3, and to a canceled check
    executed by Target 3. But petitioner has not explained how this
    information substantially contributed to any of Target 3’s convictions.
    Finally, even if we accept as true many of the disputed points that
    petitioner presses—including that (1) the IRS took a greater interest in
    Targets 1, 2, and 3 because of petitioner’s allegations and even opened
    examinations or investigations because of petitioner, (2) petitioner met
    frequently with CID agents who welcomed petitioner’s help, (3) CID
    Special Agent A once asked petitioner if petitioner would be willing to
    testify against Target 3, and (4) Target 1 once called petitioner to
    threaten petitioner and petitioner reported this conversation to CID
    Special Agent A—it would not be enough for petitioner to prevail. That
    is because the record before us is devoid of evidence that petitioner
    provided any specific information that substantially contributed to
    assessments the IRS actually made. See Lissack v. Commissioner, 68
    F.4th at 1324.
    12 As petitioner points out, the WBO did not consider Revenue Officer A’s case
    notes, the documents petitioner provided to CID Special Agent A, or the testimony
    from Target 3’s trial in making its original determination. Those materials were added
    to the administrative record during the proceedings before our Court. But given that
    the materials generally either support the WBO’s determination (the case notes and
    documents petitioner provided) or are neutral (the trial testimony, see supra note 11),
    the WBO’s failure to consider the materials was harmless error and does not warrant
    a remand. See, e.g., Kasper, 150 T.C. at 27–28.
    23
    [*23] IV.   Conclusion
    To summarize, after reviewing the administrative record, as
    supplemented, we conclude that the WBO’s determination to deny
    petitioner’s claims for an award was not “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
    of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” See Van
    Bemmelen, 155 T.C. at 72 (quoting Kasper, 150 T.C. at 21). And there
    is no need for a remand. We therefore will grant the Commissioner’
    Motion for Summary Judgment and deny petitioner’s Motion for
    Remand.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 972-17

Filed Date: 12/21/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2023