We affirm the convictions for violating 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (mail fraud through submission of false withholding forms), 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2) (willfully aiding the preparation of false W-4 forms), and 26 U.S.C. § 7205 (aiding the submission of fraudulent withholding exemption certificates).
Condo’s first challenge to the tax laws derives from his alleged understanding of the constitutional reference to weights and measures and other references leading to his conclusion that current Federal Reserve notes are not valid currency, cannot be taxed, and are merely “debts.” The Ninth Circuit has repeatedly rejected this theory as frivolous.
United States v. Kelley,
Condo’s other tax theories are equally frivolous. His assertion that 26 U.S.C. § 7343 only applies to business entities and their employees ignores the word “includes” in the statute delineating the class of persons liable. The word “includes” expands, not limits, the definition of “person” to these entities. He asserts that the sixteenth amendment only allows taxing income from “sources” (entities and monopolies created by law), not persons. The sixteenth amendment authorization, however, is for a tax on income from whatever source derived.
Condo’s various proposed jury instructions offered pro se were rejected by the trial court, and properly so.
We have previously addressed and denied Condo’s selective prosecution claim. His indictment for both tax fraud and mail fraud was proper, since proof of different facts was required.
United States v. Piascik,
The district judge properly denied Condo’s requested immunity for certain defense witnesses. The witnesses were themselves the target of prosecutorial investigation,
see United States v. Turkish,
The district judge’s refusal to dismiss for prosecutorial misconduct was not an abuse of discretion. There was no reversible error because of unauthorized persons present in the grand jury room. The case agent was there to aid the grand jury in handling bulky documents, his presence was fleeting, and any error was harmless. Condo was allowed to present his theories before the grand jury, and the Government’s failure to present all exculpatory evidence is not a basis for dismissal. There is no showing of any prosecution misconduct so “flagrant” that the grand jury was “deceived.”
United States v. Wright,
Condo’s claims relating to the sixth amendment are likewise invalid. He was allowed to present his
pro se
instructions to preserve his constitutional theories on appeal. He showed no “special need,” and there is no absolute sixth amendment right to
both
self-representation and assistance of counsel.
United States v. Halbert,
Condo’s most substantial argument is that the Government did not prove his mental state satisfied the willful or intent to defraud requirement of the statutes. He suggests he relied on the advice of counsel. He originally developed his theories, however, without help from the legal profession. Condo received some later advice from several lawyers who were also tax protesters. Condo dismissed two attorneys, YHPA’s counsel Barrett and Channell, after they eventually advised him his constitutional objections would not hold up. Condo also admitted he was aware as early as 1976 that his theories on the nontaxability of Federal Reserve notes had been rejected as frivolous by this court. He knew, as well, of several YHPA members’ criminal convictions after they followed his program. Yet he continued to advise members of the unconstitutionality of the taxing system and aided in the preparation and mailing of the W-4 forms which gave rise to this criminal prosecution. Ample evidence at trial justified the jury’s conclusion that Condo was not acting on reliance of counsel, but, instead, on his own initiative.
Condo also suggests that our recent decision in
United States v. Dahlstrom,
Condo is adamant in asserting the unconstitutionality of the taxing system. But a belief in the unconstitutionality of a law, no matter how tenaciously held, does not excuse its violation if, indeed, the law is upheld as constitutional.
United States v. Ness,
AFFIRMED.
