Byers v. Internal Revenue Service, No. 19-1893 (6th Cir. 2020)
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Byers received notice from Chase Bank that IRS Agent Conroy had requested information in connection with the IRS’s investigation into her then-husband. The notice stated that “[t]he requested information includes information that relates to you.” Conroy sent Byers a letter, informing her that she was under investigation for violating 26 U.S.C. 6700 and/or 6701, issued a document request, and requested an interview. Byers refused. Byers received copies of IRS summonses that Conroy had issued, directing her banks to provide, for 2007-2018, “any and all documents … related to . . . Andrea Byers and any other corporation or name Andrea Byers used . . . including but not limited to multiple entities. Bank of America responded to the summons but Conroy has not opened the envelope containing the response due to Byers’s pending petition to quash.
The government successfully moved for dismissal of Byers’s petitions and for enforcement of the summonses. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, noting the IRS’s broad authority to collect information related to taxpayers’ potential liabilities. The IRS was not required to establish a “reasonable basis” for its investigation before its summonses could be enforced. The IRS made a prima-facie showing in support of enforcing its summonses. She did not establish that the IRS abused the district court’s process in seeking enforcement of the summonses.
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