inicio mail me! sindicaci;ón

Archive for December, 2007

Today on WalletPop

A new way to earn some extra money: IRS informant - The IRS pays people a portion of the money collected from tax cheats when you give them information that helps catch the fraudsters.

Fast food employee highlights credit card risk - Little machines called “skimmers” make it easy for people to steal your credit card information after you hand your credit card to them.

Prosperity Theology: Gospel or blasphemy? - Exposing the fraud that is “prosperity gospel” or “prosperity theology”.

You can now subscribe to comments!

Just for Michael… as he has asked for it a couple of times. Check the box toward the bottom of the comment screen, and you can be notified of new comments!

40 days of Frivolous Tax Arguments: Compliance with an administrative summons issued by the IRS is voluntary.

IRS sends taxpayer an administrative summons. Taxpayer claims that responding and complying is voluntary. Not so. A summons is a command to appear, testify, and produce documents, and the IRS is authorized to issue one. The district courts will enforce the summons, if necessary. And yes, there can be criminal penalties.

40 days of Frivolous Tax Arguments: The IRS must prepare federal tax returns for a person who fails to file.

Supporters of this bogus theory say that it’s the IRS’s responsibility to prepare and file a tax return for them if they don’t file. But the tax law really says that if someone doesn’t file their return, the IRS can prepare their return (i.e. make up numbers for the person). It doesn’t say that the IRS must prepare the return. And the tax law doesn’t say that a person is excused from filing a tax return.

Create your own MLM in ten easy steps

Written by me at Walletpop…

Hundreds of thousands of Americans get sucked into Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) companies each year. From Mary Kay to Amway to Herbalife to PrePaid Legal, the list is seemingly endless. Each offers its own special spin on the products it sells, but the main focus of an MLM is on recruiting new members.

MLMs live and die by the recruitment of new members, who make the bulk of the product purchases from the company. Little of the product is resold to an actual end user, but the MLM company doesn’t care. The sale has been made to the distributor (or associate or representative or member or consultant or whatever term you like). Read the rest of this entry »

A bit more creative gingerbread house

What a fantastic idea! GingerbreadGhetto.com makes and photographs unusual gingerbread houses. This one is my favorite… the Gingerbread Prison Yard:

Read the rest of this entry »

Cheating Patriots cheat their way to an NFL record*

Yes. It’s true. The Cheater Patriots are now in the NFL record books for “going” 16-0 in the regular season. Of course, I put “going” in quotes, because we all know that their record really should not be even be considered a record. They were caught cheating early in the season, and should at least have that win taken away from them.

Instead, the NFL basically gave the Cheater Patriots a big “oh well” on the whole deal. Sure, they got a fine and lost a draft pick, but they should have had to give up the win against the Jets. I’m not sure why they got away with this. Lord knows that if it was the Green Bay Packers caught videotaping things in direct violation of the rules, we wouldn’t have heard the end of it all season. Nope. And there would have been much bigger sanctions.

The Patriots may be an excellent team, but the world will never know if they could have gotten this record without cheating. Because they did it. They cheated. And this “record” is forever tainted.

On stealing money from people

Yesterday, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ran a story about a woman who had lost her life’s savings because of an old cashier’s check that JP Morgan Chase wouldn’t honor.

The story goes like this: Willie Floyd is 82 years old. She had a cashier’s check for $19,700 that was in a safe deposit box. The money came from cashing out a savings account at Marine Bank in Waukesha in April 1985. The bank changed from Marine Bank, to Bank One, and now to Chase.

After receiving correspondence from the bank in spring 2006, Willie decided to get the cashier’s check out of the safe deposit box and cash it. Bank employees told her it wasn’t any good anymore.

Willie hired an attorney, Tarena Washington Franklin, to help her get her money. Bank officials indicated that a check uncashed for five years is abandoned under Wisconsin law, but that’s where the paper trail ends.

So Tarena is going to court to try to get her client’s money from her.

Here’s something to ponder… If Tarena is so interested in helping people get the money that’s rightfully theirs, maybe she can help me out. Maybe Tarena can speak to her mother, former attorney, convicted felon, and tax cheat (both state and federal) Hazel J. Washington, and ask Hazel to pay me the $8,000 she skipped out on for services I rendered related to her criminal defense on tax evasion charges.

Fair is fair, isn’t it?

40 days of Frivolous Tax Arguments: Taxpayers can reduce their federal income tax liability by filing a “zero return.”

This one is at least a little creative. File a tax return showing no taxable income, and your taxes are zero. That would work if you really have no income. But since most of us have W-2s and 1099s and such, that “zero income” return is actually false… and you really do owe taxes.

Don’t you kind of wonder who is coming up with these arguments? I mean… how can they think it’s okay to just lie and say their income is zero? It makes no sense.

One of the cutest pictures ever

Next entries »