FEC Official: New Emails Show Agency May Have Colluded With IRS in Political Targeting Scandal
The vice chairman of the Federal Election Commission said Monday
he had seen undisclosed email exchanges between FEC employees and the
Internal Revenue Service that show the two agencies may have worked
together to target conservative groups.
Don McGahn’s admission would seem to confirm earlier reports that raised questions regarding a possible collusion between the two agencies.
An investigator with the FEC had
contacted Lois Lerner, the IRS official at the center of the targeting
scandal, to discuss the status of the American Future Fund, a
conservative political advocacy group, McGahn told CNN.
Shortly after Lerner was contacted, the IRS sent a questionnaire to the conservative group.
“Who’s the dog and who’s the tail (in
this case)? Who knows,” McGahn said. But “dealing with Lois Lerner is
probably out of the ordinary.”
The emails “could be benign (or) could be more sinister,” he added, noting that the email exchanges are not a smoking gun.
Still, he continued, the emails call for further investigation.
Also, it’s worth noting that FEC
staffers were apparently never cleared to reach out to the IRS — an
apparent departure from FEC protocol, McGahn, a Republican, said.
Republican congressional
investigators, including Congressman Darell Issa (R-Calif.), have made
numerous and repeated requests for copies of the email exchanges.
FEC Democratic Chairwoman Ellen L. Weintraub said she is unfamiliar with any email exchanges between her agency and the IRS.
“If there was any evidence or
targeting based on ideology, that would be extremely serious, but I have
not seen any evidence of that,” she said.
“I am not aware of requesting or
receiving any confidential taxpayer information. I am not aware of any
requests for anything that wasn’t publicly available,” she added.
Lois Lerner, who earlier this year
invoked her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent, had contacted an FEC
attorney with questions involving conservative groups applying for
tax-exempt status, National Review Online reported last week.
The FEC attorney wrote in an email to
Lerner in February 2009: “Several months ago . . . I spoke with you
about the American Future Fund, a 501(c)(4) organization that had
submitted an exemption application the IRS [sic].”
The FEC, the NRO report adds, is not
exempted under Rule 6103, which prohibits the IRS from sharing sensitive
taxpayer data. And based on the email exchanges, it looks like Lerner
and an unnamed FEC attorney may have been trading confidential taxpayer
information.
Here’s a troubling line from the FEC
attorney: “When we spoke last July, you had told us that the American
Future Fund had not received an exemption letter from the IRS.”
Again, along with the IRS being
prohibited from discussing or disclosing personal tax information, FEC
staffers were supposedly never cleared to contact the IRS about these
issues.
“Things seemed weird to me” McGahn
told CNN. “The FEC has not had a good track record with calling balls
and strikes. They’ve been criticized for not playing fair.”
The emails create “the appearance that people are being selectively targeted. And that’s something that should never happen,” he added
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