The prosecutor launched a preemptive strike in this criminal prosecution of a tax protester. The district court granted the prosecutor’s request for an order forbidding the defense to bring “to the attention of the jury by argument or evidence any matters relating to” five enumerated issues:
That the Sixteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was improperly ratified and therefore never came into being; That wages are not income and therefore are not subject to federal income tax laws;
That tax laws are unconstitutional;
That filing a tax return violates the privilege against self incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution;
That Federal Reserve Notes do not constitute cash or income.
These “tired arguments”,
Coleman v. CIR,
His technical argument is that offenses such as tax evasion under 26 U.S.C. § 7201, failure to file tax returns under 26 U.S.C. § 7203, and filing false forms W-4 under 26 U.S.C. § 7205 — the offenses of which Buckner was convicted — are specific intent crimes. The prosecution must show that Buckner did these things knowing he had a duty to act otherwise.
United States v. Pomponio,
The approach is brought up short by this circuit’s rule that only objectively reasonable mistakes negate the necessary mental state for tax offenses.
United States v. Moore,
Our cases from
Moore
to
Davenport
have dealt with jury instructions. Their principle governs the receipt of evidence as well. If a particular belief is objectively unreasonable as a matter of law and there
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fore irrelevant, the court need not accept evidence tending to show that the defendant possessed that belief. Fed.R.Evid. 402. And there can be no doubt that the five propositions the district court put under the ban are unreasonable as a matter of law. We have rejected each, many times. Believing an incorrect proposition of law is a “reasonable” mistake only if there is a bona fide dispute about it. For example, a person with a rare blood type who regularly sells the blood may be reasonable (if wrong) in believing that the exchange is not taxable, when there is no precedent directly on point. See
United States v. Garber,
The court told the jury that it could convict Buckner only if the prosecution proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Buckner knew he had to pay taxes and file returns. It informed the jury that a “good-faith misunderstanding of the law based on reasonable grounds may negate wilfulness.” The court’s order did not prevent Buckner from showing any mistake based on “reasonable grounds”. He complied with the tax laws until 1981. Then he stopped filing returns and started making specious claims of exemption on his W-4 forms. The evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict.
Buckner’s principal remaining argument is that the court unduly restricted his access to information about the composition of the grand jury panel. The court made available data about the panel in April 1984, from which the grand jurors who indicted Buckner were drawn. The court also set a date for making motions based on these data. The date passed, but Buckner belatedly filed an unsworn motion calling the data insufficient for analysis and requesting more. The court properly denied this request. Buckner had a statutory right to data sufficient to assess the composition of the panel, 28 U.S.C. § 1867(f);
Test v. United States,
Buckner also insists that the charges of failure to file returns are lesser included offenses of the charges of tax evasion. We held the contrary in
United States v. Foster,
Affirmed.
