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Top 25 biggest Illinois pensions in State University Retirement Systems for 2016

NEW: TOP 25 BIGGEST ILLINOIS PENSIONS IN SURS
Reboot Contributor – Kevin Hoffman
Top 25 biggest Illinois pensions in SURS for 2016.
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APR 1, 2016 3901 0
Top 25 biggest Illinois pensions in SURS for 2016.
Taxpayers United of America this week released a new analysis of the State Universities Retirement System — the second-largest of the five Illinois pension funds.
The Chicago-based organization, which advocates for tax relief and pension reform, routinely publishes lists highlighting the state’s biggest pensioners. Its latest analysis focuses on the retirement system for academics and staff at public universities and community colleges in Illinois.
“SURS is in dire need of significant pension reform, much like the other Illinois state pension funds. But since individual SURS retirees are some of the highest paid employees, and therefore biggest pensioners in Illinois, the need for reform is all the more serious for both beneficiaries and taxpayers,” said Jared Labell, the organization’s director of operations.
As of June 30, 2015, SURS had a funded ratio of 44.2 percent with $22.1 billion in unfunded pension liabilities, according to a report published in March by the General Assembly’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability.
SURS at a glance
Defined benefit active members: 69,381
Average defined benefit active member salary: $50,103
Self-managed plan active members: 11,928
Total retirees: 51,631
Employee contribution: 8 percent (not eligible for Social Security)
Average age of retiree: 62.6
Average pension: $38,070
Years of service at retirement: 19
SURS
Source: Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
The average annual pension payout in SURS is the second-lowest behind the State Employees’ Retirement System, but the vast majority the fund’s top pensioners are distinguished medical professionals and former higher education executives.
However, as the Better Government Association reported in 2013, many of the biggest pensioners were University of Illinois at Chicago employees who retired, began collecting their pensions, and then were rehired after waiting the required 60 days in order to work part-time for a smaller salary.
More from TUA:
“Taxpayers were forced to pay 467 percent more into the SURS pension fund than the multi-millionaire SURS retirees paid into their own government pensions. That means that for every dollar that an SURS government employee contributed to their own retirement, taxpayers were forced to match them with a subsidy of $4.67.”
We’ve only listed the Top 25 biggest pensioners in SURS, but all 200 can be found here. The lowest annual pension payout on the list is $190,631.
*Note: Estimated lifetime pension payout assumes a life expectancy of 85 (IRS Form 590) and the 3 percent compounded cost-of-living adjustment.
25. George Honig
Title: Professor, Pediatric Hematology and Oncology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $296,657
Pension Collected to Date: $3.03 million
Employee Contributions: $401,027
Highest Annual Earnings: $333,915
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $4.95 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 8.1%
Years Retired: 12
Age at Retirement: 67
Years of Employment: 33
24. Craig Bazzani
Title: Vice President for Business and Finance
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $298,927
Pension Collected to Date: $3.39 million
Employee Contributions: $298,686
Highest Annual Earnings: $355,929
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $9.41 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 3.2%
Years Retired: 14
Age at Retirement: 55 (retired under a pension formula intended for police officers and firefighters)
Years of Employment: 25
23. Jesse Delia
Title: Professor, Communications
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $300,880
Pension Collected to Date: $1.36 million
Employee Contributions: $282,870
Highest Annual Earnings: $376,404
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $6.06 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 4.7%
Years Retired: 7
Age at Retirement: 65
Years of Employment: 39
22. Margaret Lee
Title: President
Employer: Oakton Community College
Annual Pension: $302,098
Pension Collected to Date: $209,056
Employee Contributions: $452,272
Highest Annual Earnings: $424,373
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $4.93 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 9.2%
Years Retired: 1
Age at Retirement: 71
Years of Employment: 33
21. Joel Sugar
Title: Professor, Ophthalmologist
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $308,498
Pension Collected to Date: $3.06 million
Employee Contributions: $446,643
Highest Annual Earnings: $326,310
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $8.33 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 5.4%
Years Retired: 12
Age at Retirement: 59
Years of Employment: 29
20. James Feld
Title: Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $313,444
Pension Collected to Date: $1.16 million
Employee Contributions: $516,149
Highest Annual Earnings: $572,259
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $8.49 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.1%
Years Retired: 6
Age at Retirement: 61
Years of Employment: 21
19. Phillip Forman
Title: Dean, College of Medicine; Vice Chancellor for Health Services
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $316,933
Pension Collected to Date: $3.57 million
Employee Contributions: $376,541
Highest Annual Earnings: $355,942
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $4.90 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 7.7%
Years Retired: 14
Age at Retirement: 67
Years of Employment: 29
18. Jacob Wilensky
Title: Professor of Ophthalmology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $325,119
Pension Collected to Date: $3.17 million
Employee Contributions: $410,791
Highest Annual Earnings: $332,009
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $7.33 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 5.6%
Years Retired: 12
Age at Retirement: 62
Years of Employment: 31
17. Robert Easter
Title: President
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $331,086
Pension Collected to Date: $331,365
Employee Contributions: $471,219
Highest Annual Earnings: $842,908
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $7.01 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.7%
Years Retired: 5
Age at Retirement: 64
Years of Employment: 39
16. Andrew Wilbur
Title: Radiologist
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $336,440
Pension Collected to Date: $877,157
Employee Contributions: $599,074
Highest Annual Earnings: $384,578
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $10.53 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 5.7%
Years Retired: 5
Age at Retirement: 59
Years of Employment: 32
15. Lou Henson
Title: Head Basketball Coach
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $336,950
Pension Collected to Date: $3.37 million
Employee Contributions: $300,266
Highest Annual Earnings: $401,287
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $3.70 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 8.1%
Years Retired: 20
Age at Retirement: 64
Years of Employment: 32
14. Ruth Steeler
Title: Professor, Pediatric Hematology-Oncology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $337,810
Pension Collected to Date: $191,322
Employee Contributions: $283,282
Highest Annual Earnings: $146,489
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $2.38 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 11.9%
Years Retired: 1
Age at Retirement: 78
Years of Employment: 9
13. James Ausman
Title: Head of Neurosurgery
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $348,789
Pension Collected to Date: $2.51 million
Employee Contributions: $418,471
Highest Annual Earnings: $771,604
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $5.19 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 8.1%
Years Retired: 8
Age at Retirement: 70
Years of Employment: 17
12. Vernon Crawley
Title: President
Employer: Moraine Valley Community College
Annual Pension: $361,260
Pension Collected to Date: $814,450
Employee Contributions: $581,987
Highest Annual Earnings: $674,211
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $3.15 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 18.5%
Years Retired: 4
Age at Retirement: 75
Years of Employment: 28
11. Clarence Bowman
Title: President
Employer: ISU
Annual Pension: $374,976
Pension Collected to Date: $520,562
Employee Contributions: $410,284
Highest Annual Earnings: $511,080
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $11.97 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 3.4%
Years Retired: 3
Age at Retirement: 60
Years of Employment: 35
10. Ronald Albrecht
Title: Associate Professor, Anesthesiologist
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $379,805
Pension Collected to Date: $2.96 million
Employee Contributions: $462,077
Highest Annual Earnings: $637,633
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $5.41 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 8.5%
Years Retired: 9
Age at Retirement: 70
Years of Employment: 25
9. Herand Abcarian
Title: Head of Department of Surgery
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $381,245
Pension Collected to Date: $2.50 million
Employee Contributions: $628,987
Highest Annual Earnings: $579,910
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $6.87 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 9.2%
Years Retired: 8
Age at Retirement: 67
Years of Employment: 20
8. James Stukel
Title: President
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $390,583
Pension Collected to Date: $2.33 million
Employee Contributions: $337,524
Highest Annual Earnings: $417,670
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $5.32 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.3%
Years Retired: 11
Age at Retirement: 67
Years of Employment: 35
7. Mahmood Mafee
Title: Clinical Professor of Radiology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $416,597
Pension Collected to Date: $3.48 million
Employee Contributions: $562,570
Highest Annual Earnings: $494,056
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $8.81 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.4%
Years Retired: 10
Age at Retirement: 64
Years of Employment: 32
6. Joseph Flaherty
Title: Dean of the University of Illinois College of Medicine
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $420,670
Pension Collected to Date: $1.05 million
Employee Contributions: $635,127
Highest Annual Earnings: $515,473
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $9.53 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.7%
Years Retired: 5
Age at Retirement: 64
Years of Employment: 35
5. Peter Maggs
Title: Law Professor
Employer: U of I
Annual Pension: $422,150
Pension Collected to Date: $543,220
Employee Contributions: $509,123
Highest Annual Earnings: $305,999
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $3.27 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 15.6%
Years Retired: 2
Age at Retirement: 77
Years of Employment: 21
4. Ronald Guenther
Title: Director of Athletics
Employer: University of Illinois – Foundation
Annual Pension: $459,315
Pension Collected to Date: $988,340
Employee Contributions: $614,647
Highest Annual Earnings: $744,153
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $9.53 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 6.4%
Years Retired: 5
Age at Retirement: 65
Years of Employment: 29
3. Edward Abraham
Title: Orthopedic Surgeon
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $466,759
Pension Collected to Date: $3.69 million
Employee Contributions: $535,165
Highest Annual Earnings: $459,998
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $9.04 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 5.9%
Years Retired: 9
Age at Retirement: 66
Years of Employment: 35
2. Tapas Das Gupta
Title: Professor, Head of Department of Surgical Oncology
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $480,381
Pension Collected to Date: $4.77 million
Employee Contributions: $475,331
Highest Annual Earnings: $481,856
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $5.25 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 9.1%
Years Retired: 12
Age at Retirement: 72
Years of Employment: 35
1. Leslie Heffez
Title: Professor and Head, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Employer: UIC
Annual Pension: $564,298
Pension Collected to Date: $578,460
Employee Contributions: $768,611
Highest Annual Earnings: $783,862
Estimated Lifetime Pension Payout: $22.33 million
Percent Contributed to Estimated Lifetime Payout: 3.4%
Years Retired: 4
Age at Retirement: 55
Years of Employment: 29
You can find the complete list of the Top 200 SURS pensions at www.taxpayersunitedofamerica.org.

State Department Seeks to Limit Judicial Watch Questioning of Clinton Aides

State Department Seeks to Limit Judicial Watch Questioning of Clinton Aides
Image: State Department Seeks to Limit Judicial Watch Questioning of Clinton Aides
Image: State Department Seeks to Limit Judicial Watch Questioning of Clinton Aides Hillary Clinton (Photo by Andrew Renneisen/Getty Images)
By Greg Richter | Wednesday, 06 Apr 2016 04:37 PM

The State Department is seeking to limit questions a conservative watchdog group can ask aides for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, The Washington Post reports.
In a filing made late Tuesday, State asks U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan to limit Judicial Watch’s questions of seven current and former Clinton aides to “the reasons for the creation of [the clintonemail.com] system.”
State has asked the judge to keep off-limits the employment status of Huma Abedin, who was then deputy chief of staff and currently vice chairman of Clinton’s presidential campaign. The department also wants Judicial Watch to be barred from asking about “the storage, handling, transmission, or protection of classified information, including cybersecurity issues; and questions about any pending investigations.”
Latest News Update
 
Judicial Watch, on the other hand, has submitted a discovery plan to depose aides Patrick M. Kennedy, Cheryl Mills, Huma Abedin and Bryan Pagliano on their knowledge of the server. Pagliano, who set up the server, has plead the Fifth to Congress, but has been granted immunity from prosecution.
Judicial Watch’s plan to question the aides was made to determine whether Clinton’s private email server violated open-records laws.
Sullivan is expected to make a ruling on the two proposals on April 12, Lawnews.com reports.
Breaking News at Newsmax.com

Lost faith in central banks and the economic end game

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Economic Crisis GraphWe live in strange economic times, stranger perhaps than at any other point in history. Since 2007-2008, the globally intertwined and dependent fiscal system has suffered considerable declines in every conceivable area. Manufacturing around the world is in a slump, from Japan to China to Europe, with the minimal manufacturing accomplished in the U.S. also fading. Consumption is falling, most notably in petroleum and raw materials. Employment is truly dismal, with the U.S. posting over 94 million people as “non-participants” in the national work force.
High paying jobs are disappearing, and the only jobs replacing them are in the low wage service sector. This problem is becoming so pervasive that certain more socialist states including California and New York are attempting to offset the loss of sustainable income jobs by forcing retail and service companies into paying an inflated minimum wage. That is to say, the government hopes to stop the bloodletting in wages by magically turning low paying jobs into high paying jobs.
As anyone with any economic sense knows, you cannot have a faltering consumer sector in which people are buying less and force companies to pay their employees far more per hour than the job is worth. Those companies will simply lay off more employees, cut hours or shut down entire branches of their operation in order to maintain their profit margins. Either that, or those companies will go out of business.
One sector, though, continues to reap certain benefits (for now), and that is equities. There is a good reason for this.
The stock market is a kind of Pavlovian control mechanism, a mental trigger in the minds of the masses that dominates their perceptions of the world’s financial health. The drooling public sees green lines and they hail impending “recovery;” they see red lines and suddenly they begin to wonder if all is not well. As the former head of the Federal Reserve Dallas branch, Richard Fisher admitted in an interview with CNBC, the U.S. central bank in particular has made its business the manipulation of the stock market to the upside since 2009:

What the Fed did — and I was part of that group — is we front-loaded a tremendous market rally, starting in 2009.
It’s sort of what I call the “reverse Whimpy factor” — give me two hamburgers today for one tomorrow.
I’m not surprised that almost every index you can look at … was down significantly. [Referring to the results in the stock market after the Fed raised rates in December.]

Fisher went on to warn investors:
http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000474362

I was warning my colleagues, “Don’t go wobbly if we have a 10-20% correction at some point…. Everybody you talk to … has been warning that these markets are heavily priced.”

Central banks have focused most of their efforts on levitating the Dow as well as energy markets for some time now. Why? Because the general public does not pay attention to any other market indicators. They do not care that equipment giant Caterpillar is having the worst profit period in the company’s history. They do not care that the Baltic Dry Index, a measure of global shipping rates and thus a measure of global orders for raw goods, continues to bounce around well below its original historic lows due to crashing shipping demand. They do not care that according to the World Economic Forum, oil demand has dropped to levels not seen since 1997. They do not know nor do they care to know. Their only barometer for economic danger is the Dow, and central banks know this well.
Something has changed recently, though. Why, for example, did the Fed go against its long-time mandate of manipulating equities into positive territory and commit to the taper of QE3? Why did they then later commit to hiking interest rates, causing a massive downturn in stocks from December to February?
The jawboning of stocks in March back from the brink actually tells us a lot in terms of the central bank’s intentions. First, it tells us that the Fed does not intend to use tools such as rate cuts and stimulus measures to buy back market optimism. Rather, they are relying solely on investor faith that central banks are not going to leave them high and dry. They have decided to use manipulative language alone, rather than the manipulative monetary policy we have grown accustomed to.
Second, the action of the Fed in raising rates has torn away the veil and shown the public stocks truly cannot survive without central bank support. The moment the Fed leaves markets to their own devices, the only things left for investors to turn to are the fundamentals, and of course the fundamentals are ugly beyond belief. Thus, stocks begin to plummet.
As I point out in my article “Markets ignore fundamentals and chase headlines because they are dying,” some of the greatest market rallies in U.S. history occurred during the onset of the Great Depression, and all of these rallies were based on a false sense of public faith that recovery was “right around the corner”. The rally this past March is no different. There are no fundamentals to back it, it was built entirely on faith, and soon it will implode as similar rallies did during the Depression.
Just in the past week alone, certain signs are bubbling to the surface to undermine the facade of the recent dubious rally.
For anyone who was betting on oil markets to continue their spike past the $40 per barrel mark, there was a lot of bad news. Saudi Arabia crushed optimism by announcing that it would not be entertaining a “production freeze” proposal unless all other oil producing nations, including Iran, also agreed to it.
Iran then doubly crushed optimism that by announcing an increase in production rather than committing to a freeze.
Russia then administered the final blow by releasing data showing that their oil output had risen to historic levels, indicating that will not be entering into any agreement on a production freeze.
Why do oil markets matter? Well, it would seem that stocks for the past few months have been tracking oil. When oil takes a dramatic turn to the negative, so do stocks. This may be a purely psychological correlation, but that is kind of the point. All stock market movements are purely psychological today, and when psychological optimism fails, the fundamentals strike hard. So far, oil is erasing its 2016 gains, and equities will soon follow.
In fact, most of the world is beginning to feel tremors yet again in stocks as central bank meeting and announcements are having less and less affect on positive psychology.
Asian markets were trounced last week with a return to volatility as Chinese and Japanese central banks were either unable or unwilling to slow the tide. European markets followed, with some market participants coming to terms with the nature of the recent rally:

“The market is missing confidence,” said Mathias Haege, who helps oversee 300 million euros ($342 million) as managing partner of MaxAlpha Asset Consultant in Frankfurt. “At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what central banks are doing if economic growth doesn’t accelerate and corporate earnings continue to shrink.”

And there you have it. Stock markets are in no way a measure of economic health, they are only a measure of investor confidence in central banks, and that confidence is failing in light of extremely negative fundamentals.
So, I ask again, why have many central banks and the Federal Reserve in particular pulled back from their usual tools (near zero rates and stimulus) at a time when investor faith in economy is falling?
Recently, Wikileaks published a transcript https://wikileaks.org/imf-internal-20160319/     of an internal International Monetary Fund (IMF) discussion that provides some answers. The general thrust of the document shows that the IMF deliberately set the stage for a return to instability in Greece this summer with the intention of destabilizing the EU, and more specifically cornering Germany. The goal? To essentially force the EU to allow the IMF to take a more commanding role in the economic affairs of the supranational body.
Far too much attention is paid to the criminality of national central banks like the Federal Reserve, but the Federal Reserve is nothing more than a franchise, an appendage of a greater banking syndicate with the IMF, Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the World Bank leading the way.
What many people do not seem to understand is that national central banks are expendable in the minds of globalists like those at the IMF. They are nothing but institutions on paper. Their true assets are unknown because they have never been audited. They can be destroyed or absorbed on a whim if globalists see greater gains as a result. The Wikileaks documents support the assertions I wrote in my article, “The economic end game explained,” that central banks, led by the IMF and the BIS, are deliberately creating instability in global markets in order to create a crisis large enough to substantiate total centralization of power in the hands of those same institutions.  http://personalliberty.com/economic-endgame-explained/
This should not be news to anyone, but unfortunately it is. Back in 2012 IMF head Christine Lagarde made this revealing statement:

When the world around the IMF goes downhill, we thrive. We become extremely active because we lend money, we earn interest and charges and all the rest of it, and the institution does well. When the world goes well and we’ve had years of growth, as was the case back in 2006 and 2007, the IMF doesn’t do so well both financially and otherwise.

If the IMF is engineering a financial crisis in Europe in order to gain more power and influence, why wouldn’t the Fed be doing the same for the IMF in the U.S.?
The only explanation that makes sense in terms of the Fed allowing an incremental removal of support from U.S. markets is that theirgoal is to create instability. The jawboning and false hopes act as a kind of steam valve, slowing the crash to a manageable pace.
The loss of faith in central banks and their ability to support dying markets is indeed occurring. However, this is not the whole story. The fact is, the loss of faith is meant to happen, and is useful to globalists at the IMF who seek to replace hundreds of central bank franchises across the globe with a single governing entity overseeing the financial administration of the entire world. That is to say, the IMF is creating the problem so that they can offer themselves and their authority as a solution.
Just as the international bankers use stimulus and rate policy as tools, so, to, do they use chaos.
— Brandon Smith

No-Stress Restrooms at New York College

No-Stress Restrooms at New York College

No-Stress Restrooms at New York College
Written by Laurie Higgins
Well, now, that didn’t take long. Yesterday, I warned about the dystopian cultural landscape that the sexual subversives among us are pursuing with unholy fervor and at breakneck speed. They seek to end all public recognition and accommodation of sex differences. I clearly didn’t issue my warning early enough.
Sexual revolutionaries drunk with anti-cultural power, aided and abetted by bootlicking government and business leaders, are successfully eliminating public recognition of the value and meaning of sex differences. At Manhattan’s uber-regressive Cooper Union College, they’ve leaped ahead a step or two. Rather than allow just gender-confused students and faculty to use opposite-sex restrooms, the Cooper Union administration decided, what the heck, just let everyone use any facility his, her or zir heart’s desire. All sex-segregated restrooms are gone. Nary a one left. Interim president Bill Mea offered this bizarre defense:

When there’s a gendered space, there’s a sense of ownership to that space….When people see someone who [sic] they think doesn’t belong there, it can create stress for everyone. So we thought, let’s just take that away.

Oddly, in the olden days when restrooms corresponded to one’s objective sex rather than subjective feelings about one’s objective sex, I never felt I “owned” restrooms. I didn’t feel I owned women’s restrooms in stores, malls, health clubs, schools, or movie theaters. I used them.
And I’m pretty sure that giving all men free rein to use women’s restrooms is not going to decrease women’s stress.
Mea is correct, however, I did believe some people didn’t belong in the women’s restrooms I used: objectively male people. Still do, as a matter of fact. I “feel” that the objective sex of people matters. It has meaning and value and is the source of feelings of modesty and desires for privacy. I don’t want to be forced to use restrooms, dressing rooms, or showers with those whose sex I don’t share. I don’t think other women or men should be either.
Now restroom signage at Cooper Union offers these distinctions:

  • “Urinals and stalls”
  • “Stalls only”
  • “Single occupancy”

Young’uns, you may not know this, but in the backward, hateful gendered days of yore when objective, When people thought immutable sex differences meant something, these restrooms corresponded to (TRIGGER WARNING!) male, female, and faculty respectively (I wonder how many male faculty members will be using the “stalls only” restrooms).
This is coming everywhere, my friends. Culture-destroying movements always start on the fringy edges of society where the feckless live and move and have their being. And then they begin their march to the center.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, it’s time to get those dusty spines out of the attic. Stop all that stooping and groveling at the altar of sexual deviance and irrationality. Stand tall. Be courageous. Speak and act as if you believe your beliefs are in reality true. If you know that being created as male or female has profound meaning, then do something about it.

U.S. won't bail out Puerto Rico or will it/ Article from 2014 leaves the door open

The Obama Administration’s Backdoor Bailout Of Puerto Rico

Martin SullivanMartin Sullivan, Contributor
Puerto Rico’s economy and its government finances are in dire straits. The territory has had eight consecutive years of negative economic growth. Its official unemployment rate is nearly 15 percent. All three credit rating agencies have put its bonds just one notch above junk. Over the last decade, while the total U.S. population grew by 8 percent, the population of Puerto Rico declined by 2 percent. Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, and many of them looking for jobs have settled in the central Florida area.
The Obama administration is committed to helping Puerto Rico’s economy get back on its feet — within limits. On October 30, 2009, President Obama signed Executive Order 13517, which expanded the responsibilities of the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status to seeking recommendations on economic development. On March 11, 2011, the task force issued a 122-page report with recommendations consisting mostly of streamlining access to existing federal programs, the formation of intragovernmental working groups, and a wish list of legislation that Congress is unlikely to pass. On June 14, 2011, Obama became the first U.S. president to visit Puerto Rico in over 50 years. And in light of Puerto Rico’s continued problems and new concerns about defaults on its bonds, on November 21, 2013, David Agnew, co-chair of the task force, announced that a team of experts from the administration would begin working with Puerto Rican government officials to marshal existing federal resources and help Puerto Rico build its capacity for addressing economic issues.
“I don’t want to convey that that translates into a direct ask for federal direct assistance, because that is not contemplated at this time,” said Mary Miller, Treasury undersecretary for domestic finance, in early November.“These efforts are not a federal intervention,” wrote Agnew when he announced the new team. And just last week a White House spokesperson said: “There is no deep federal assistance being contemplated at this time.”
But here’s a little secret that the powers that be inside and outside government don’t want you to know: The Obama administration has already provided a multibillion-dollar bailout to Puerto Rico. Nobody in the major media outlets has noticed because the issue is highly technical. But let me try to give you a plain English explanation.

In 2010, as part of his conservative agenda to expand Puerto Rico’s economy, Gov. Luis Fortuño wanted to enact large corporate and individual tax cuts. But like for all wannabe tax cutters, it was extremely difficult for him to identify ways to pay for those tax cuts, especially since Puerto Rico’s finances were in terrible shape. The governor appointed a tax reform commission and hired the Washington law firm of Steptoe & Johnson to advise it. Steptoe devised a plan whereby the Puerto Rican government would impose an excise tax on U.S. companies that operated manufacturing facilities in Puerto Rico. The excise tax was first revealed to the public on October 22, 2010. The legislature approved it the following day, and it was signed into law on October 25. The tax was estimated to raise approximately $6 billion over five years.
According to Steptoe & Johnson and the Puerto Rican government, the burden on U.S. companies would be minimal because the new tax paid by U.S. multinationals to Puerto Rico would reduce U.S. taxes by the same amount. For income tax purposes, Puerto Rico is considered a foreign jurisdiction, and foreign taxes can be creditable against U.S. tax. So in effect, the new tax would be paid by the U.S. treasury, not U.S. companies.

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The scheme had one serious weakness. There is good reason to question the constitutionality of the tax. That’s because the commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution prohibits a government from taxing businesses operating outside its jurisdiction. Under the new scheme, Puerto Rico was imposing tax on the non-Puerto Rican affiliates of Puerto Rican manufacturers owned by U.S. multinationals. (The U.S.-owned Puerto Rican manufacturers themselves were protected from Puerto Rican tax by agreements signed with the Puerto Rican government.) The taxed affiliates have no physical presence in Puerto Rico. In legal circles and in the courts, there is much debate about whether this type of tax passes constitutional muster. If the tax is not constitutional, it is not creditable against U.S. tax.
Shortly after enactment of the new excise tax, the Puerto Rican government asked Treasury to rule on the creditability of the tax. On March 30, 2010, Notice 2011-29 was issued. In the notice, Treasury provided no legal opinion. The notice stated that the tax was “novel” and that Treasury would have to study it. But it the meantime, U.S. multinationals manufacturing in Puerto Rico could credit the tax until further notice.
Now, three years and billions of dollars later, there has been no further notice. Nor is there any prospect of any. Without committing itself to a legal position, Treasury has provided certainty that has enabled Puerto Rico to raise taxes in the most politically painless way imaginable. That being the case, in February 2013 the government enacted new legislation that extended the tax to 2017 — it was originally scheduled to expire in 2016 — and raised its rate. The revised tax is estimated to raise nearly $2 billion per year, more than 20 percent of Puerto Rico’s general revenue.
A lot of powerful interests like the current situation. They include the government and both major political parties in Puerto Rico, the Obama administration, investors in Puerto Rico’s municipal bonds, and U.S. multinationals that can credit the tax. The only ones on the short end of the stick are U.S. taxpayers, who are footing the bill that they would probably be unwilling to pay if they were ever asked.
 

Full Text Published by Tax Analysts®

By Martin A. Sullivan — martysullivan@comcast.net

It may be off the radar of the public and media, but the fragile state of the economy and government finances in Puerto Rico is not being ignored by the White House.Puerto Rico has experienced eight straight years of negative economic growth. According to the most recent data, the unemployment rate is 14.7 percent. Continuing the decline that began in 2002, Census Bureau data show that Puerto Rico’s population fell by 36,000, or about 1 percent, between July 2012 and July 2013.
Meanwhile, investors in America’s $3.7 trillion municipal bond market, already shocked by Detroit’s bankruptcy, are jittery about $70 billion of outstanding Puerto Rican bonds. The commonwealth’s bond rating is currently just one notch above junk status, and rating agencies are threatening a downgrade. The next time it issues new bonds, Puerto Rico may have to pay interest as high as 10 percent, more than double what financially secure municipal issuers pay. (“$2 Billion Deal in Works for Puerto Rico,” The New York Times, Jan. 21, 2014.)
On October 30, 2009, President Obama signed Executive Order 13517, which expanded the responsibilities of the President’s Task Force on Puerto Rico’s Status to seeking recommendations on economic development. Founded by President Clinton in December 2000, its mission used to be to examine proposals for Puerto Rico’s future as a commonwealth, state, or independent nation.
The task force that convened in December 2009 was composed of members from almost every Cabinet agency, including Treasury. The officials from Treasury were not from the Office of Tax Policy or the IRS. After two public hearings in San Juan and Washington, the task force issued a 122-page report on March 11, 2011. Its recommendations on economic policy were all favorable to Puerto Rico, but they were unlikely to have a measurable effect on the island’s economy. They consisted mostly of streamlining access to existing federal programs, the formation of intragovernmental working groups, and a wish list of legislation that Congress is unlikely to pass.
However, Treasury officials were drafting a three-page document that would deliver billions of dollars of cash benefits to Puerto Rico. The action-forcing event was a request in November 2010 from the government of the island for a ruling on creditability against U.S. tax of a new tax on multinational manufacturers doing business in Puerto Rico that took effect on January 1, 2011.
In general, under special grants from the Puerto Rican government, these manufacturers otherwise pay very low tax to Puerto Rico. And under a special provision of U.S. law in place since 1921, they are considered foreign corporations whose income generally is not subject to tax unless repatriated back to the United States. The new tax was estimated to raise nearly $6 billion over five years.
Puerto Rico’s economy is heavily dependent on its manufacturing sector, which accounted for 48.6 percent of GDP in 2011 (compared with 11.5 percent in the 50 states). The sector is dominated by affiliates of large U.S. multinationals, including those of most major U.S. pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers, as shown in the table on the next page. Since the expiration of the Puerto Rican economic activity credit (which provided transition relief from the repeal of section 936 in 1996) at the end of 2005, these affiliates have mostly been operating as branches of controlled foreign corporations.
On March 30, 2011, the IRS released Notice 2011-29, 2011-16 IRB 663. It stated that the new tax was novel and that “determination of the creditability of the Excise Tax requires the resolution of a number of legal and factual issues.” Until these issues are resolved, the IRS would not challenge taxpayers’ claims that the tax was creditable. Further, if the IRS decided the credit was not creditable in the future, the new position would apply only prospectively. Thus, most — but not all — of the new tax burden imposed on multinationals doing business in Puerto Rico was completely eliminated by Treasury.
                               Table 1.
              Largest U.S. Public Companies in Puerto Rico
       (Ranked by Number of Full-Time Employees in Puerto Rico)
 ______________________________________________________________________
                                                    Full-Time Employees
 Company Name                                       in Puerto Rico
 ______________________________________________________________________
 Johnson & Johnson                                         4,090
 Pfizer                                                    4,000
 Medtronic                                                 3,050
 Abbott Laboratories Inc.                                  2,200
 Amgen                                                     2,200
 General Electric Co.                                      2,200
 Baxter International                                      2,080
 Eaton                                                     1,669
 Merck & Co.                                               1,350
 Fenwal International Inc.                                 1,332
 Coca-Cola                                                 1,300
 Stryker                                                   1,231
 Hewlett-Packard                                           1,100
 St. Jude Medical                                          1,033
 Pepsi-Cola Co.                                              899
 Becton, Dickenson & Co.                                     866
 Boston Scientific                                           600
 Bristol Myers Squibb                                        600
 Zimmer Holdings Inc.                                        582
 Hubbell                                                     513
 Procter & Gamble                                            500
 ______________________________________________________________________
 Sources: Caribbean Business; The Book of Lists 68 (2013).
On February 28, 2013, the government of Puerto Rico, citing the need for additional tax revenue because of continued poor economic conditions, expanded and extended the life of the excise tax to 2017 (Act 2-2013). Under the revised law, the tax rate will be 4 percent beginning on July 1, 2013, and through its new expiration date of December 31, 2017. The tax is now expected to raise $1.96 billion in fiscal 2014 (which began in July 2013). As shown in Figure 1, that is more than 20 percent of expected general fund revenue.
It has been two years and 10 months since Notice 2011-29 was issued, but the IRS and Treasury still have not reached a final decision about the creditability of the tax. The law firm of Steptoe & Johnson LLP, which in the employ of the government of Puerto Rico helped design the tax, issued an 84-page opinion letter stating that the tax is a creditable tax and that it does not violate the commerce clause or the due process clause of the Constitution. However, five out of five tax attorneys contacted by Tax Analysts had serious doubts that the tax was constitutional.
The Financial Information and Operating Data Report of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, issued on October 18, 2013, states:

    Act 154 has not been challenged in court; consequently, no court has passed on the constitutionality of Act 154. There can be no assurance that its constitutionality will not be challenged and that, if challenged, the courts will uphold Act 154. To the extent a court determines that the imposition of the excise tax or the expansion of the income tax or both are unconstitutional, the Commonwealth’s revenues may be materially adversely affected.

Given the vital importance of the tax to Puerto Rico’s financial standing and of the creditability of the tax to U.S. companies, it is unclear why Treasury and the IRS have not finalized the ruling if the technical tax experts consider it to be creditable. Providing finality to a favorable ruling would remove uncertainty that is damaging to the investment decisions of U.S. multinationals operating in Puerto Rico and to the investors in Puerto Rican bonds that are nervous about the commonwealth’s finances.Given the lack of any other logical explanation, it cannot be ruled out that Treasury has not issued a final ruling because there is serious concern that the tax is not creditable and that it is under political pressure to let the interim status remain intact until the tax expires (originally in 2016, now in 2017). Those applying pressure include the taxpaying companies themselves, the Puerto Rican government, and municipal bond investors. It also cannot be ignored that the White House and its task force have a strong commitment to strengthening the economy of Puerto Rico and the finances of its government. If Treasury or the IRS ruled that the tax is not creditable, it would be adverse to the administration’s goal of maximizing assistance to Puerto Rico’s flagging economy.
Financial Crisis
Since 1898 Puerto Rico has been part of the United States, and since 1917 Puerto Ricans have been U.S. citizens. Puerto Rico has a nonvoting representative in Congress, and Puerto Ricans cannot vote in presidential elections. The island is the size of Connecticut, but with approximately 3.5 million residents, it is more populous than 22 states. Section 933 provides that income derived from sources within Puerto Rico by a resident of Puerto Rico generally is exempt from U.S. taxation.
Puerto Rican Gov. Luis Fortuño took office on January 2, 2009. Besides being a member of the pro-statehood New Progressive Party (PNP), he is a Republican in the mold of Ronald Reagan. Puerto Rico’s economy was severely depressed, and its bonds were close to achieving junk status. With an already declining population, high unemployment, and shrinking manufacturing sector, the economy had generally been considered to be in recession since 2006. So when the Great Recession hit in 2008, it had a more devastating effect on Puerto Rico than on the mainland. Six months after Fortuño’s inauguration, the unemployment rate in Puerto Rico was 16 percent and rising. Citing Puerto Rico’s bloated public sector, Wall Street Journal columnist Mary Anastasia O’Grady in February 2012 called the government Fortuño inherited “a welfare-state basket case.”

Figure 1. Puerto Rican General Fund Revenues
(in billions)

Source: Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, “Financial Information and Operating Data Report,” Oct. 18, 2013.Fortuño’s approach to the crisis was a bold program of regulatory reforms and massive downsizing of the government workforce. Eventually he would eliminate 15,000 public service jobs. He also implemented large tax cuts. His plan, called the “Strategic Model for a New Economy,” included a “comprehensive tax reform that takes into account the Commonwealth’s current financial situation.” In February 2010 the governor formed a commission to review the island’s tax system and propose reform. It consisted of a former Treasury secretary, the current Treasury secretary, the president of the Government Development Bank, the economic development secretary, the governor’s chief of staff, and the chairs of the Puerto Rican Senate and House Treasury committees. Steptoe & Johnson was hired to advise it.
A theme often repeated in discussions of tax reform was that foreign corporations operating in Puerto Rico should share a large portion of the tax burden currently borne by individuals and domestic business. But at the same time, the government wished to safeguard tax incentives and avoid harming business.
On January 19, 2010, Senate President Thomas Rivera Schatz of the PNP introduced legislation that would impose a 10 percent tax on the net taxable income of all corporations with gross receipts greater than $10 million that had entered into tax exemption grant agreements with the government of Puerto Rico. The preamble to the bill reads: “It is essential that all economic sectors contribute, especially those that receive more benefits from the island’s economic activities.” On March 5 a group of 11 members of the PNP filed identical legislation in the lower chamber of the Legislative Assembly. In an April 2010 opinion piece in Caribbean Business, former Gov. Carlos Antonio Romero Barceló voiced his strong support for the bill but noted that “the opposition of the vested interests, that is, the ‘tax-exempt’ companies and their lawyers, lobbyists, and the financial, commercial and manufacturing organizations,” had already mounted an effort to defeat it and were threatening to leave the island.
The Fortuño administration on October 22 introduced the plan it had been developing for months as a substitute for the Rivera Schatz minimum tax. Neither the general idea nor the details of the plan had been previously released. Nevertheless, revised HB 2526 was approved by the legislature on October 23 in an unusual Saturday session. On the same day, members of the tax commission and Steptoe & Johnson partner Philip R. West, former Treasury international tax counsel, briefed a group of tax practitioners on the new statute. The practitioners were told of continued efforts to convince Treasury and the IRS that the tax was creditable. According to one participant at the meeting, West said that ongoing discussions with the IRS “have been favorable but are at a critical point in the discussion.” (See “Offshore Firms Subject to Permanent Taxation Under New ‘Source Rule,'” Caribbean Business, Nov. 4, 2010.) West is widely credited with developing the new law. (See “The Architect of the Excise Tax and Change in the ‘Source Rule,'” Caribbean Business, Nov. 4, 2010.)
On October 25, three days after its introduction, Fortuño signed the bill that became Act 154. On the same day, Steptoe & Johnson provided the Puerto Rican government an opinion letter asserting that the new excise tax should be creditable against U.S. federal income tax as an “‘in lieu of’ tax under section 903 of the Internal Revenue Code.”
The purpose of Act 154 was to offset the cost of Fortuño’s soon-to-be-enacted cut in individual and corporate taxes, which was estimated to reduce revenue by an average of $1.2 billion annually for six years. Under the Fortuño plan, individual income taxes would be cut by 50 percent, including a doubling of the earned income tax credit. Corporate taxes would be reduced by 30 percent, including a reduction in the top corporate tax rate from 39 percent to 30 percent.
As a general rule, nonlocal manufacturers (mostly affiliates of U.S.-headquartered multinationals operating as branches of controlled foreign corporations) have entered into industrial tax exemption agreements with the government of Puerto Rico. These agreements provide, in addition to substantial relief from property and excise taxes, a low flat rate of tax on Puerto Rican-source income.
Act 154 does not impose tax on entities operating in Puerto Rico. Thus, it does not violate the agreements Puerto Rico has made with nonlocal manufacturers. Instead, it imposes tax on the affiliates that purchase goods and services from the Puerto Rican manufacturers. The law has two parts: a permanent expansion of the source rules that would greatly increase the amount of multinationals’ profit subject to Puerto Rican income tax, and for foreign corporations with a Puerto Rican affiliate with gross receipts in excess of $75 million for any of the three preceding years, a temporary excise tax on purchases from Puerto Rico that is paid in lieu of payment of income tax under the expanded source rule.
In its opinion letter, Steptoe & Johnson revealed that the tax reform commission considered as a revenue-raising measure the implementation of combined reporting and formulary apportionment used by many states. Under this approach, all income of corporations in a unitary business is considered a single taxable entity, and profits are allocated across jurisdictions based on an apportionment formula. If that were adopted by the island, the Puerto Rican manufacturers and non-Puerto Rican affiliates purchasing from them would be considered a single business subject to Puerto Rican income tax. Concerned about the administrative difficulties of this approach — in particular, the difficulty in obtaining the companywide information needed to apply formulary apportionment effectively — Puerto Rico decided to tax income of non-Puerto Rican affiliates of Puerto Rican companies doing business in Puerto Rico when those affiliates make substantial purchases from Puerto Rican companies.
Specifically, with the adoption of Act 154 Puerto Rico established a permanent expansion of the source rule for Puerto Rican income tax as an alternative to combined reporting and formulary apportionment. Further, because the tax reform commission was concerned that the source rule might pose significant administrative difficulties, Puerto Rico imposed as an alternative to the expanded source rule an excise tax on purchases by non-Puerto Rican companies from manufacturing affiliates with more than $75 million in gross receipts.
For the source rule to apply to income of a non-Puerto Rican affiliate, its purchases from a related Puerto Rican manufacturer must be at least 10 percent of the non-Puerto Rican affiliate’s purchases or 10 percent of the Puerto Rican manufacturer’s sales. Effectively connected income is calculated by one of two methods. The first is an equal-weighted four-factor formula (with purchases, sales, property, and payroll serving as factors). The second method, for taxpayers unwilling or unable to provide adequate documentation necessary to apply the four-factor formula, treats as Puerto Rican-source income 50 percent of the income from sales of property manufactured in Puerto Rico.
The excise tax imposed on purchasers is collected and remitted by the Puerto Rican manufacturers. Under Act 154, the tax rate was 4 percent for calendar year 2011, 3.75 percent in 2012, and 2.75 percent in 2013, and will be 2.5 percent in 2014, 2.25 percent in 2015, and 1 percent in 2015. (As discussed below, in February 2013 the tax rate was increased to 4 percent for all purchases after June 30, 2013, and the expiration date was extended one year, to the end of 2017.)
Various news reports place the number of firms paying the excise tax at between 30 and 50. Most of them are U.S. pharmaceutical, medical device, and electronics manufacturers.
Backlash
The government of Puerto Rico repeatedly asserted that the new tax would be minimally burdensome because, based on the opinion letter from Steptoe & Johnson, it would be creditable against U.S. income tax. Despite this, manufacturers in Puerto Rico, their parent companies, and business groups were incensed. They were angry over the lack of consultation, the precedent set for other jurisdictions, and significant uncertainty about creditability. Even if the IRS did agree that the new tax was creditable, manufacturers with foreign parent companies often would be unable to credit it.
“Puerto Rico has historically proven itself to be a center of excellence in attracting foreign investment and venture capital from innovative bioscience companies and investors,” said Jim Greenwood, president and CEO of the Biotechnology Industry Organization, in an October 27, 2010, statement. But “this new tax increase will profoundly affect the decision-making of foreign corporations as they consider whether to continue to do business and deploy their capital in Puerto Rico.”
In an October 27, 2010, statement, former Michigan Gov. John Engler, now CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers, decried the new levy:

    We are alarmed by the actions taken by the Puerto Rican government to impose a new excise tax on multinational manufacturers. [Multinational manufacturers] represent approximately 80 percent of all the manufacturing jobs in Puerto Rico and nearly 26 percent of Puerto Rico’s GDP. The imposition of the tax could jeopardize the jobs of over 100,000 people and could damage business relationships that have taken years to develop between the affected companies and the government of Puerto Rico.

Similar statements were issued by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Advanced Medical Technology Association, and the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.Carlos Bonilla, chair of the Puerto Rico Manufacturers Association Tax Committee, said: “If they allow Puerto Rico to get away with this, then it may become a threat to the multinational model. Then the Irish, Singapore and Spain may try to emulate Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico is saying it has the right to impose a tax on a foreign company that has never been in Puerto Rico. This is something totally new.” (See Caribbean Business, Nov. 3, 2010.)
The leading rival political party to the PNP, the pro-Commonwealth Popular Democratic Party (PDP), strongly criticized the plan. “If this is the right alternative, why was it approved in the middle of the night and in record time,” Sen. Eduardo Bhatia Gautier of the PDP said (Reuters, “Puerto Rico Slaps New Tax on Offshore Business,” Oct. 24, 2010). During the campaign leading up to the 2012 gubernatorial election, PDP candidate Alejandro García Padilla blasted the tax and said he would overturn it if he were elected.
According to Caribbean Business, Fortuño personally contacted executives of the largest firms affected by the tax “to both justify the move and try to do everything possible to blunt the negative impact the laws might have on company operations” and to discuss “how the new tax will impact a particular firm, and what additional help the local government may provide.” Subsequently, the Fortuño administration mitigated the burden of the tax when the Puerto Rican Treasury Department on December 29, 2010, issued Excise Tax Regulation Number 7970 that established a maximum annual tax and introduced seven different credits that could be used to reduce the excise tax.
‘A Great Victory’
On March 30, 2011, the IRS released the notice on the tax, which said:

    The IRS and the Treasury Department are evaluating the Excise Tax. The provisions of the Excise Tax are novel. The determination of the creditability of the Excise Tax requires the resolution of a number of legal and factual issues. Pending the resolution of these issues, the IRS will not challenge a taxpayer’s position that the Excise Tax is a tax in lieu of an income tax under section 903. This notice is effective for Excise Tax paid or accrued on or after January 1, 2011. Any change in the foreign tax credit treatment of the Excise Tax after resolution of the pending issues will be prospective, and will apply to Excise Tax paid or accrued after the date that further guidance is issued.

So although the IRS and Treasury made no determination about the creditability of the tax, businesses could claim credits for excise tax liability incurred to date and all future liability until further notice.For the many Puerto Rican manufacturers and for the government, the notice provided a welcome relief. Government Development Bank Chair Carlos Garcia, who was a member of the governor’s tax reform commission, said, “I believe that this determination of the IRS, which puts an end to challenges made by some sectors, is a great victory for Puerto Rico because we all win.” (See “IRS Confirms 4% Excise Tax Can Be Written Off Federal Return,” News Is My Business, Mar. 31, 2011.) Shortly thereafter, Fortuño stated:

    As confirmed by the IRS just a couple of weeks ago, the companies will be able to credit that excise tax against their federal income tax liability. In short, these companies will now be able to contribute to Puerto Rico’s fiscal and economic reconstruction in a way that does not affect their bottom line, therefore protecting the operations and jobs they have on the island.

The immediate effect of Notice 2011-29 for multinationals with operations in Puerto Rico was that they could include the full benefit of the foreign tax credit in their first-quarter results for 2011. As Abbott Laboratories wrote in response to an inquiry from the SEC:

    Based on the stated guidance in the IRS notice, the opinion of Abbott’s outside legal counsel, and discussions with our IRS auditors as part of the Compliance Assurance Program (CAP), we have concluded that the tax is creditable from a U.S. foreign tax credit perspective and that no amount of the credit relating to the excise tax paid by entities comprising Abbott’s consolidated U.S. Federal income tax return should be included in our unrecognized tax benefits. [Letter to James Rosenberg of the SEC from Thomas C. Freyman, CFO of Abbott, May 2, 2012.]

In at least one case, the new ruling plus the accounting treatment of the excise tax resulted in earnings greater than if the excise tax did not exist at all. The excise tax is accounted for as a manufacturing cost that is capitalized in inventory. Costs are only recognized when the products are sold. Foreign tax credits generated by the tax are recognized when the tax is paid. This difference in the timing improved Amgen Inc.’s financial results for the first quarter of 2011. (See Amgen press release, “Amgen’s First Quarter 2011 Revenue Increased 3 Percent to $3.7 Billion,” Apr. 20, 2011.)This is not the first time the IRS has issued a notice on the creditability of a foreign tax that had a similar interim-certain/future-uncertain structure. On December 10, 2007, the IRS published Notice 2008-3, 2008-2 IRB 253, regarding the creditability of a new alternative minimum tax called the flat rate business contribution, enacted by the Mexican government in 2007. Similar to Notice 2011-29’s treatment of the Puerto Rican excise tax, Notice 2008-03 announced that pending the completion of further study, the IRS would not challenge a taxpayer’s position that the flat tax is an income tax eligible for a credit and that any change would be prospective. Noting that the IRS never issued any subsequent ruling on the flat tax, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP wrote in 2011, “This could be indicative of the IRS’s intent and priority-setting with respect to the [Puerto Rican] excise tax as well, giving taxpayers comfort they may be able to credit the excise tax for some time to come.” (See Pharma and Life Sciences Tax News, Vol. 10, No. 3.) Mexico repealed the tax in 2013.
Nexus?
Section 901 allows taxpayers to claim a credit for “the amount of any income, war profits, and excess profits taxes paid or accrued . . . to any foreign country.” The tax must be compulsory and not in exchange for a service, subsidy, or rebate provided by the taxing government.
Section 903 allows foreign taxes that are not income taxes to qualify for credits if it is determined that the tax is levied “in lieu of” an income tax. A creditable tax under section 903 must operate “as a tax imposed in substitution for, and not in addition to, an income tax or a series of income taxes otherwise generally imposed.” Also, a credit is not available for a “soak-up tax,” which is a tax that would not be imposed absent the availability of foreign tax credits. The Act 154 excise tax was expressly designed to meet all the requirements of the regulations. It is imposed in lieu of the expanded source rule for determining Puerto Rican income tax and, if the tax is legal, there is no readily apparent reason to believe the requirements of section 903 are not met.
The potential sticking point is the constitutionality of the excise tax. In its 2010 opinion letter, Steptoe & Johnson has a 38-page analysis of constitutional issues. It concludes that it is more likely than not that both the new expanded source rule and the new excise tax satisfy the requirements of the due process and commerce clauses.
The commerce clause is the tougher standard. In Complete Auto Transit Inc. v. Brady, 430 U.S. 274 (1977), the Supreme Court delineated a four-part test for a tax to be valid under the commerce clause: (1) the tax must be applied to an activity with substantial nexus with the taxing state; (2) the tax must be fairly apportioned; (3) the tax must not discriminate against interstate commerce; and (4) the tax must be fairly related to services provided by the state. Of the four components, the test for substantial nexus is the most critical for determining the constitutionality of the excise tax.
In National Bellas Hess v. Illinois, 386 U.S. 753 (1967), the Supreme Court held that physical presence is required to establish nexus. The Court confirmed the validity of the physical presence requirement in Quill Corp. v. North Dakota, 504 U.S. 298 (1992). Both cases addressed whether a mail-order business with no physical presence in a state could be taxed by a state whose residents purchased the business’s merchandise. While Quill clearly established that in order to establish nexus for sales and use taxes, physical presence in the taxing jurisdiction is required, there is a great deal of controversy as to whether the physical presence test is also required to establish nexus for other sales and use taxes.
Without acknowledging the conflicting opinions of various state courts, the Steptoe & Johnson opinion letter adopts the view that the physical presence test applies only to sales and use taxes. Accordingly, it argues that constitutional application of an income tax to non-Puerto Rican affiliates under the expanded source rule does not require any physical presence in Puerto Rico. All that is required is a substantial presence. The substantial presence exists because the non-Puerto Rican affiliate makes substantial purchases of products manufactured in Puerto Rico, and these products are produced by related parties under common control in a unified business.
The reasoning is analogous to decisions in cases in which sellers (such as mail-order businesses) are deemed to have nexus in a state where they sell but have no physical presence. The difference here is that Puerto Rico is taxing as if substantial nexus is established by purchases rather than by sales. “While sales and marketing . . . may create such an economic presence, it is more likely than not that other activities, including production, would similarly establish such presence.” Moreover, the opinion letter points out that the expanded source rule is a substitute for unitary reporting and that unitary reporting has been deemed constitutional.
Regarding the excise tax, the opinion letter argues that the tax is not a sales or use tax, so the physical presence standard does not apply. It compares the new excise tax to the Illinois telecommunications tax that the Supreme Court upheld in Goldberg v. Sweet, 488 U.S. 252 (1989). In that decision, the Court held that Illinois had nexus substantial enough to tax a consumer’s purchase of an interstate telephone call if it originated or terminated the call and the service or billing address was in the state.
The Steptoe & Johnson opinion letter interprets this to mean that “no more than origination plus some additional presence or connection to the state is sufficient to impose the tax.” It argues that the Puerto Rican excise tax more than likely meets this standard because it applies to transactions that originate in Puerto Rico and additional presence is established as a result of the manufacturing activities by the Puerto Rican sellers and of the oversight activities in Puerto Rico by the non-Puerto Rican affiliates.
Constitutional Questions
Tax Analysts contacted five tax attorneys and inquired about the constitutionality of the Puerto Rican excise tax. All five of them expressed the view that the tax was unconstitutional or that its constitutionality was seriously in doubt.
That the excise tax is not a sales tax defies the plain English meaning of a sales tax. The excise tax is a tax on purchases by affiliates outside Puerto Rico, which are by definition sales by affiliates in Puerto Rico. The Steptoe & Johnson opinion letter’s arguments that the excise tax is not a sales tax because the transactions are between related parties and that the excise tax is separate and distinct from Puerto Rico’s generally applicable sales tax are unconvincing.
Even if the excise tax is not considered a sales and use tax, which all authorities agree would require physical presence to establish nexus, it is not at all clear that the excise tax would escape the physical presence requirement. It is true that many state courts supporting the views of state tax authorities have held that physical presence is not required for taxes other than sales and use taxes. For example, in Tax Commissioner v. MBNA America, N.A. (W.V. Sup. Ct. of App. 2006), the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals stated that the physical presence test “applies only to state sales and use taxes and not to state business franchise and corporation net income taxes.”
However, other state courts have concluded the opposite. For example, in J.C. Penney National Bank v. Johnson(Tenn. Ct. App. 1999), the district court stated that “while it is true that the Bellas Hess and Quill decisions focused on use taxes, we find no basis for concluding that the analysis should be different in the present case. In fact, the Commissioner is unable to provide any authority as to why the analysis should be different for franchise and excise taxes.”
In their textbook on state tax law, John C. Healy and Michael S. Schadewald summarize the debate this way:

      Many commentators have argued there is no reason to believe that the Commerce Clause would impose a different standard for income taxes than for sales and use taxes. Therefore, the same physical presence test should apply. Nevertheless, until the Supreme Court rules on the issue, it will be uncertain. [

Multistate Corporate Tax Course, 2009 Edition

    , CCH, 2008.]

So even if the excise tax is not considered a sales and use tax, the issue of its constitutionality is unresolved.Good Policy?
Notwithstanding the resolution of the uncertainty about the constitutionality of the Puerto Rican excise tax, it is important to step back and examine the creditability of the tax from a policy perspective. No matter how well the Puerto Rican government and its advisers have navigated the technical issues, the result they achieved raises serious concerns.
The foreign tax credit exists so our multinational corporations are provided relief from foreign taxes that would otherwise result in double taxation on their foreign profits. But as professor Daniel N. Shaviro has repeatedly pointed out, dollar-for-dollar compensation by Treasury for foreign taxes paid creates huge incentives for mischief. Shaviro emphasized that the availability of foreign tax credits creates the large incentive to engage in aggressive tax planning. For example, foreign tax credits can cause businesses to try to claim that otherwise deductible expenses, particularly fees paid for government services, are creditable foreign taxes. (See Shaviro, Fixing U.S. International Taxation, Oxford University Press, 2014.)
The availability of foreign tax credits invites abuse by foreign governments that, left unchecked, will use U.S. multinationals as conduits to tap into the U.S. treasury. Potential abuse by taxpayers and governments (and by taxpayers colluding with governments) makes it necessary for the law to limit the types and the amount of foreign taxes that can be credited.
When foreign governments impose income tax because a foreign tax credit is available, the credit does not provide double income tax relief to multinationals. If a foreign government imposes a tax only because it is creditable, the multinational would not pay any tax if the credit did not exist. The multinational pays tax and generates offsetting credits, but the credit is not helping the multinational because in the absence of the credit, there would be no tax. In this situation, the foreign tax credit is not achieving its policy objective. It is only transferring funds from the U.S. treasury to the foreign government, with the multinational acting as intermediary.
Clearly, unless it is the objective of the U.S. government to provide aid to a foreign government, this situation is highly objectionable and rules are needed to prevent it. The prohibition against creditability of soak-up taxes takes care of the easy case. With a soak-up tax, the amount of tax is explicitly linked to the availability of the credit. But more generally, how can we distinguish taxes that truly burden multinationals from those that only appear to do so?
Ideally, to prevent abuse we would have to know what the foreign government would do in the absence of the credit. As already noted, if the foreign government levies the tax because of the credit, the credit is benefiting the foreign government, not the multinational. If the government would have levied the tax anyway, the credit is providing relief to the multinational.
Unfortunately, we cannot know with any certainty what a foreign government would have done. There are, however, reasonable indicators of when a tax is levied because of the foreign tax credit. As a reasonable precaution against abuse, the U.S. government should not allow taxes to be creditable when these indicators are present.
One indicator is the net after-credit burden of a tax on the taxpaying population. This incentive effect can be quantified by the ratio of the amount of tax creditable to the total amount of revenue collected. The ratio is close to 1 when the credit is narrowly targeted on multinationals that can credit the tax. The ratio is close to zero when a tax is broadly imposed on the local population and multinationals that can credit that tax pay a small fraction of the tax. When the ratio is large, it is likely the tax is imposed because of the credit. When the ratio is small, it is likely the tax has little to do with creditability.
Most of the large manufacturers affected by Act 154 are U.S.-headquartered multinationals. Among Puerto Rico’s largest pharmaceutical manufacturers, all but one out of 33 manufacturing facilities are owned by U.S. multinationals, and all but 300 out of 17,000 workers are employed by U.S. multinationals. Among the listed medical device manufacturers, all but two out of 21 manufacturing facilities are owned by U.S. multinationals, and all but 1,100 out of 12,400 workers are employed by U.S. multinationals. (See The Book of Lists, 2013 edition, p. 177 and p. 180.) Because the ratio of tax relief provided by the United States to tax burden imposed by Puerto Rico is high, the incentive for the Puerto Rican government to levy the tax is large. Therefore, there is good reason to believe the tax would not exist (or would be significantly reduced) if it were not for the credit, and so the benefit of the credit accrues entirely (or significantly) to the government of Puerto Rico.
As a policy matter, because it is likely that the U.S. government is merely providing a subsidy to a foreign government rather than relieving U.S. taxpayers, the U.S. government should deny foreign tax credits for taxes like the Act 154 excise tax.
Crisis Continues
In the November 6, 2012, gubernatorial election, Fortuño fell short of securing reelection by a margin of 11,000 votes out of about 1.8 million cast. On January 2, 2013, he was succeeded by Padilla, who became the 11th elected governor of Puerto Rico. Later in January, after receiving clearance from Puerto Rico’s Government Ethics Office, Fortuño became a partner in the Washington office of Steptoe & Johnson.
Despite Fortuño’s efforts at downsizing the government and stimulating growth, the Padilla administration had a mess on its hands almost as bad as in 2009. Between January 2010 and January 2013, the Puerto Rican economy shed 46,000 jobs — a decline of 4.4 percent during a period when employment in the 50 states increased by 4.2 percent. And with a budget deficit of $2.2 billion, the government still had an unacceptably large amount of red ink. Unless there were fiscal reforms, the bond rating agencies were threatening to downgrade Puerto Rico’s already low credit rating even further.
To address the crisis, the Padilla administration promptly enacted a large tax increase, including new taxes as well as an increase in individual and corporate rates. All together, these measures were estimated to raise $1.4 billion in fiscal 2014. And despite Padilla’s opposition to the tax before the election, the new revenue in his plan included an increase in and extension of the excise tax under Act 154. Under the legislation unanimously approved by the Puerto Rican House of Representatives and enacted in February 2013, the excise tax rate was increased from 2.75 percent to 4 percent for the rest of calendar year 2013. And instead of the rate declining to 1 percent in 2016 and the entire tax expiring at the end of that year, the rate was frozen at 4 percent and the life of the tax extended to the end of 2017.
Both Puerto Rican political parties agreed on the excise tax. In February Rep. José Aponte Hernández of the PNP introduced legislation to make the tax permanent and increase the rate to 10 percent. In a recent letter otherwise highly critical of the current administration, Commissioner Pedro R. Pierluisi, Puerto Rico’s representative in Congress, wrote: “On a positive note, I credit the governing party for keeping in place the excise tax. . . . Whatever changes may be made to the structure or level of that tax, I believe it is critical that revenue raised from the tax be specifically targeted to address Puerto Rico’s most pressing needs.”
Unfortunately, after showing some signs of stabilization, the economy of Puerto Rico has deteriorated since midsummer. The unemployment rate rose from 13.2 percent in June to 14.7 percent in November. And the commonwealth’s credit standing has only further deteriorated. All three bond rating agencies now give Puerto Rico a rating just above junk bond status. As shown in Figure 2, Puerto Rican bonds have plummeted in value since midsummer.
On November 6, 2013, Mary Miller, the U.S. Treasury Department’s undersecretary for domestic finance, said, “We can be helpful in making sure that every federal dollar that Puerto Rico is entitled to is being spent effectively and efficiently.” Miller added that “there are many conversations that are taking place between the island and Washington more broadly, but I don’t want to convey that that translates into a direct ask for federal direct assistance, because that is not contemplated at this time.” (See Bloomberg, “Miller Says Puerto Rico to Get Management Advice Without Aid.”) On November 7 former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers said that “there are profoundly serious financial issues facing Puerto Rico right now” and that its bonds were trading as the “junkiest of the junk.” (See Bloomberg, “Summers Sees Low Market Confidence in Puerto Rico Bonds.”)
On November 21, 2013, David Agnew, co-chair of the president’s task force, announced that a team of experts from the administration would begin partnering with Puerto Rico’s government officials to marshal existing federal resources and help Puerto Rico build its capacity for addressing economic issues. Agnew wrote in a White House blog post:

    The interagency team will offer strategic advice to assist Puerto Rico in promoting its economic development and maximizing the impact of existing federal funds flowing to the Island. These efforts are not a federal intervention. Rather, these policy experts will share their expertise with the Puerto Rican officials leading the Commonwealth’s economic efforts.
Figure 2. The Value of Puerto Rican Bonds Versus
Other Municipal Bonds Since January 1, 2013

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices.Upon formation of the new interagency team, Pierluisi stated:

    In meetings and other communications, I have been urging the Administration to move beyond monitoring the situation in Puerto Rico, asking them to take specific and concrete steps to help the Governor and his economic advisors formulate sound fiscal policies that will spur economic growth and enable the territory to maintain access to capital markets.

The new team will consist of members of Padilla’s administration and federal experts from the Department of Education, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Environmental Protection Agency. It will be supported by experts at the Office of Management and Budget, the National Economic Council, the Council of Economic Advisers, and Treasury.On December 1, 2013, Treasury officials Adam Chepenik and Lawrence Seale arrived in Puerto Rico for a week of meetings. They and other federal advisers are concentrating on three fronts: fiscal strategy, optimization of federal funding, and economic development.
There is no indication that the new interagency team will make any recommendation regarding Act 154. Nevertheless, many in Puerto Rico would welcome clarification from Treasury. In a 2013 interview, Juan Lara, chief economist at Advantage Business Consulting Inc. in San Juan, proposed that lobbyists for Puerto Rico focus their efforts on the IRS instead of Congress. “In my opinion, a final determination from the IRS regarding Act 154 is among the most important issues we should address,” Lara said. “I would be pushing for the IRS to state finally that such a tax would be creditable for the next decade.” He added that “it is easier for the IRS to render a ruling; it doesn’t need legislation from Congress.” (See “Lobbyists Called Upon to Address Ruling on Act 154,” Caribbean Business, Feb. 14, 2013.)
In a recent editorial, Caribbean Business publisher Manuel A. Casiano, skeptical about the value of short visits by federal officials, suggested that the task force make clear that taxes levied by Puerto Rico through the Act 154 excise tax on multinational companies can be credited against the companies’ U.S. tax burden. He wrote:

      Puerto Rico’s fiscal situation has made the Act 154 excise tax more important than ever, and the Obama administration could strengthen this important tax-revenue source by making clear that the federal government will continue to grant the 4 percent tax credit to companies for the amount they pay Puerto Rico through the excise tax. In fact, the real big help would be to back increasing that tax credit to 6 percent to help Puerto Rico immediately even if it’s for just three years until we finish getting our economic situation turned in the right direction. [

Caribbean Business

    , Dec. 13, 2013.]

Conclusion
There are serious doubts about the constitutionality of the new taxes on U.S. multinationals originally enacted in October 2010 and then increased and extended in February 2013 by the government of Puerto Rico. The tax’s creditability against U.S. income tax is in question as well. Nevertheless, Treasury has allowed U.S. multinationals to credit the tax, and there is no indication that it will modify this policy in the future.In response to inquiries from Tax Analysts, Treasury on January 6 provided a statement that largely repeated the message of Notice 2011-29:

    Treasury and the IRS continue to evaluate the legal and factual issues which will inform the determination of whether the Excise Tax is a creditable tax. The Notice provides interim guidance on the creditability of the Excise Tax and states that the IRS will not challenge a taxpayer’s position that the Excise Tax is a tax in lieu of an income tax under section 903. Any change in the foreign tax credit treatment of the Excise Tax after resolution of the pending issues will be prospective and will not apply to prior Excise Tax paid or accrued before the date that further guidance is issued.

The 2013-2014 priority guidance plan, as updated on November 20, 2013, contains 329 projects that are priorities for allocation of the resources of the IRS and the Treasury Office of Tax Policy during the 12-month period from July 2013 through June 2014. It lists six foreign tax credit projects, but nowhere in it is there any indication of Treasury doing further analysis of the creditability of the Puerto Rican excise tax.Even if the constitutionality of the tax is established and other technical requirements for its creditability are met, the creditability is objectionable on policy grounds because the primary beneficiary of the credit is the government of Puerto Rico and not multinationals. The provision of the credit is a subsidy by Treasury to the government of Puerto Rico.
This look-the-other-way approach to the creditability of the tax may be questionable procedure and policy, but it has furthered the Obama administration’s goal of maximizing assistance to Puerto Rico under current law. It is unlikely in these times of extremely tight budgets that the administration could obtain congressional approval for financial benefits of similar magnitude.
On September 21, 2011, Pierluisi introduced H.R. 3020, the Puerto Rico Investment Promotion Act. The proposed legislation would allow businesses incorporated in Puerto Rico that earn at least 50 percent of their income to elect to operate as domestic U.S. companies whose Puerto Rican income is exempt from U.S. tax. So, unlike under current law, Puerto Rican income could be repatriated free of U.S. tax. But this legislation is going nowhere. Similarly, efforts to provide favorable treatment for Puerto Rico in international tax reform were rejected by House Ways and Means Committee Chair Dave Camp, R-Mich. (See “Congressional Chairman Rejects Puerto Rico Exemption Proposal,” Caribbean Business, Sept. 19, 2013.)
Act 154 is obscure outside Puerto Rico. But its continuation is critical to Puerto Rico’s financial future. Unless pressure from Congress or the public is brought to bear, it is likely that Treasury will continue to allow the tax to remain creditable, as it did in the case of the Mexican flat tax. Practitioners contacted by Tax Analysts expressed the view that taxpayers who do not receive the credit have not challenged the credit in court because they do not believe they could prevail in Puerto Rican courts and that the U.S. Supreme Court would likely not hear the case. The other interested parties are fine with the status quo. Those include both major political parties in the Puerto Rican government, the Obama administration, investors in Puerto Rico’s municipal bonds, and U.S. multinationals that can credit the tax. The only ones on the short end of the stick are U.S. taxpayers, who are footing the bill.

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Willow Springs Police Department spent $966,625 from Seizures /Forfitures

LAWNEWS

Police Department Bought Motorcycles, Cars With Nearly $1 Million Seized Under Controversial Program

The Equitable Sharing Program was suspended late last year for budgetary reasons, but was restarted by the Justice Department earlier this month. (iStockPhoto)

A new report from the Justice Department found that a police department located in a Chicago suburb used nearly $1 million it received from a controversial government program to buy items including motorcycles, a Chevy Camaro, and a boat, raising further questions about whether the program should exist at all.
According to an audit conducted by the Justice Department and released today, the Willow Springs Police Department in Willow Springs, Ill., spent $966,625 in funds from the Justice Department’s Equitable Sharing Program to purchase items the federal agency contended were outside the program’s intended purpose of enhancing law enforcement operations.
The Equitable Sharing Program was suspended late last year for budgetary reasons but was restarted by the Justice Department earlier this month.
“The excess and deficiencies of the Willow Springs Police Department are symptoms of a larger problem,” Jason Snead, a policy analyst at The Heritage Foundation, told The Daily Signal. “The lack of transparency, oversight and accountability in how equitable sharing funds are spent allow for this sort of ridiculous purchase.”

In its audit, the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General reported that the Willow Springs Police Department spent more than $116,000 it received from the Equitable Sharing Program to purchase 13 vehicles, some of which were used sparingly, including two Harley Davidson motorcycles, a 2013 Chevy Camaro, and a 2013 Ford F-250.
The police department also used money from the program to fund overtime and payroll costs and purchase computer equipment, Tasers, and office furniture.
Each of the motorcycles the department bought was further outfitted with new wheels, exhaust, chrome upgrades, and heated handgrips, and driven 512 and 799 miles, respectively. The Justice Department, noting the $23,562 cost to adding upgrades to the Harley Davidsons, called them “unnecessary.”
Not only did the government find that the motorcycles were used sparingly, but the Chevy Camaro the Willow Springs Police Department purchased with Equitable Sharing funds registered only 518 miles on its odometer as of July 2015. The police department bought the car, which the government said was a “pursuit car,” in June 2014.
Though officials with the Village of Willow Springs did not refute the purchase of the Camaro—and the use of equitable sharing payments to buy it—the law enforcement agency did disagree with the characterization of the car as a “pursuit vehicle.” Instead, town officials said the Camaro was used for “covert operations” that do “enhance law enforcement operations.”
The Justice Department also called into question a 2013 Ford Expedition and 26-foot boat the Willow Springs Police Department bought using forfeiture proceeds.
According to town officials, who responded to the Justice Department’s audit, the police department bought the Ford Expedition for its former police chief. Though the SUV was a “civilian model,” it was “fully loaded.”
The Willow Springs Police Department also bought a second Ford Expedition using forfeiture proceeds, which was $13,000 cheaper than the “fully loaded” model.
The boat, bought primarily with a grant awarded by the Department of Homeland Security, was intended to be used for patrolling the Des Plaines River, according to the Justice Department.
It’s been used just three times by the Willow Springs Police Department.
Under the Justice Department’s Equitable Sharing Program, participating law enforcement agencies seize cash, cars, and property under federal asset forfeiture laws, which experts like Snead say allows police departments to circumvent state laws that are oftentimes more strict. Through their participation in the program, agencies keep up to 80 percent of forfeiture proceeds, with the remaining money going to the federal government.
Civil asset forfeiture is a tool that gives law enforcement the power to seize property, cash, and cars if they suspect they’re tied to a crime. In some instances, the property owner is never charged with a crime.
Many who advocate for reforming civil asset forfeiture laws at both the state and federal levels point to the Equitable Sharing Program as one aspect in need of changing.
Under the controversial program, police departments must use the money they receive for “law enforcement purposes,” which civil asset forfeiture opponents argue is vague and can lead police departments nationwide to purchase unnecessary items.
“Law enforcement agencies that receive these funds do not have to justify their purchases or expenses to elected legislators or the public. It is only via audits, sometimes years after the fact, that the public ever finds out about any improprieties,” Snead said.
“That makes it all the more likely that waste and abuse will continue to occur—if not in Willow Springs, then in the countless other agencies that partner with DOJ to get their share of the hundreds of millions of dollars of forfeiture funds doled out each year,” he continued.
Snead warns that the Equitable Sharing Program furthers the profit incentive that he believes civil forfeiture creates, as law enforcement agencies can use forfeiture dollars to pad their budgets, particularly in times when funding may be cut.
“It is ironic that earlier this week, DOJ heralded the return of equitable sharing payments by stating that law enforcement agencies desperately need these funds for critical law enforcement operations,” Snead said, “yet only days later, the DOJ I.G. is noting that this agency spent $67,000 on chrome-accented motorcycles it barely uses.

Ted Nugent’s 20 Reasons to Vote for Trump Liberals Horrified

 From theConservative Tribune 4/2/2016

Conservative favorite Ted Nugent is known for his straightforward approach.
It should come as no surprise, then, that a recent Facebook post by the outspoken guitarist explaining reasons to vote for GOP front-runner Donald Trump would send liberals into full panic mode.
While Nugent did not endorse any candidate, he said his list in favor of voting for “The Donald” was too special not to share.
We think you’ll agree with him:
Obama is against Trump
The Media is against Trump
The establishment Democrats are against Trump
The establishment Republicans are against Trump
The Pope is against Trump
The UN is against Trump
The EU is against Trump
China is against Trump
Mexico is against Trump
Soros is against Trump
Black Lives Matter is against Trump
MoveOn.Org is against Trump
Koch Bro’s are against Trump
Hateful, racist, violent Liberals are against Trump

The Nuge nailed it. The reason these people and organizations are against Trump is because he threatens them and their left-wing agenda. A Trump presidency would certainly shake up the infrastructure many on this list have either established or fought to maintain under President Barack Obama and his administration.

 

Greek illegalls will be held and sent back once their asylum applications are processed

Uncertainty prevails on day before Greece starts returns of migrants

There was little sign of preparation on either side of the Aegean less than 24 hours before Greece was due to begin returning migrants to Turkey, and Greek and Turkish officials gave conflicting information on the logistics of the plan.
The returns are a key part of an agreement between the European Union and Turkey aimed at ending the uncontrollable influx into Europe of refugees and migrants fleeing war and misery in the Middle East, Asia and Africa.
Under the deal, those who cross into Greece illegally will be held and sent back once their asylum applications are processed. For every Syrian returned, one Syrian will be resettled to Europe directly from Turkey.

So far, more than 6,000 migrants and refugees have been registered on Greek islands since March 20, the date on which the agreement came into force. Where they will depart from, to where they will be sent, and even how many people will be taken back to Turkey under this deal on Monday, remains unclear.
On Sunday, there were few signs that Lesbos, the island hundreds of thousands of people passed through on their way to northern Europe, was getting ready to send back migrants. A police spokesman said the force was still awaiting instructions.
Across the Aegean in the coastal town of Dikili, which a Turkish official said would receive refugees sent back from Greece, just two room-size tents were set up on the pier of its cramped port on Saturday. Two portable toilets were installed nearby.
Further south, four small blue tents were set upon the town of Cesme for those sent back from the Greek island of Chios.
Turkey’s interior minister, Efkan Ala, was quoted by the pro-government newspaper Aksam as saying 500 people were expected in Turkey from Greece on Monday. Afghans, Iraqis and Pakistanis would be deported to their countries, he said.
The Athens News Agency reported over the weekend that the returns would begin on Monday morning on two Turkish passenger ships chartered by Frontex, the EU border agency. Some 250 people would be returned each day through Wednesday, the report said, without citing sources.
“Planning is in progress,” George Kyritsis, a Greek government spokesman for the migration crisis told Reuters. “I will not confirm any report.”
Kyritsis said returns would take place on Monday, “barring any massive hurdle which cannot be overcome” but they would not be of people who have applied for asylum. The numbers being floated “had come out of thin air,” he said.

“CHALLENGING AND VOLATILE”
More than 51,000 migrants and refugees remain in Greece since border closures along the Balkans last month. Hundreds of migrants who on Friday broke out of the Chios holding facility in protest at the deal are at the island’s port. Hundreds of migrants in mainland Greece are also protesting to demand the borders open.
Arrivals to the islands remained steady on Sunday, two weeks since March 20, with 514 migrants, including many Syrians and Iraqis, crossing from Turkey through Sunday morning. Of those, 364 arrived on Lesbos, authorities said.
Many of those rescued by the Greek coast guard off Lesbos were unaware they would be sent back to Turkey.
Greece’s parliament passed an asylum amendment bill on Friday needed to implement the agreement. The legislation does not explicitly designate Turkey as a “safe third country” – a formula to make any mass returns legally sound.
The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) and human rights groups have denounced the agreement as lacking legal safeguards. Amnesty International called it “a historic blow to human rights” and said it would send a delegation to Lesbos and Chios on Monday to monitor the situation.
UNHCR’s spokesman on Lesbos, Boris Cheshirkov said there were still gaps in both Greece and Turkey that need to be addressed.
“We’re not opposed to returns as long as people are not in need of international protection, they have not applied for asylum,” he said.
More than 3,300 migrants and refugees are on Lesbos, an island of mainly Greek refugees who fled Turkey in the 1920s.
About 2,800 people are held at the Moria center, a sprawling complex of prefabricated containers, 800 more than its stated capacity. Of those, 2,000 have made asylum claims, UNHCR said.
Aid agencies have pulled out of Moria since it became a closed facility last month and in protest at conditions there. Journalists have been barred from entering the site and holding centers on four other islands.
Condition on Lesbos were “challenging and volatile,” UNHCR said, with insufficient food and pregnant women and children among those held. Families have been separated since the deal, with some members inside Moria and others elsewhere in Europe.
“Many of those who have arrived here have experienced horrendous wars,” Cheshirkov said. “To be put in a closed environment feels like punishment whereas seeking asylum is not a crime, it’s a fundamental human right.”
(Additional reporting by Murad Sezer in CESME and Lefteris Papadimas in ATHENS; Writing by Karolina Tagaris; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

left

4 of 4

right
Migrants and refugees with their mouths taped stage a protest at a makeshift camp at the Greek-Macedonian border near the village of Idomeni, Greece, April 1, 2016.
REUTERS/MARKO DJURICA

What’s behind the war on Christianity?

What’s behind the war on Christianity?

1.6K Shares

Cross on hill at SunsetThe Christian faith in its true New Testament form is the only religion that cannot be manipulated in favor of One Worldism or universalism, sometimes called the New World Order. This is precisely why the world system and its political leaders hate, despise and persecute Christians and Christianity.
I hasten to explain that all the phony Christian fronts, televangelists and world evangelists are not Christianity but very much a part of the worldly system and an antichrist. They, almost without exception, teach a watered-down, universalist form of Christianity that preaches love and acceptance and tolerance of sinful behavior above all else, especially repentance, baptism and obedience – or dumbed-down Christianity. They want to mold God into man’s image rather than man into God’s.
I hasten to add that no American evangelist did more to promote the dumbed-down universalist form of Christianity than Billy Graham, and no world religious leaders did more to promote universalism than recent and current popes.
All religions are collectivist religions except Christianity which is an individual and individualist faith. Governments want and must have collectivism under some name whether it be democracy, socialism or communism, and the only god acceptable to government and its agents is the god of government.
Collectivism is a certain means of social, economic and religious control. Collectivist politicians regularly espouse individualism, human liberty and democracy at the same time. This is an impossibility. Individualism and human liberty are the opposites of democracy and any other forms of collectivism.
The collectivist mentality or the mass collective mind is the spirit of the New World Order. The collectivist man cannot oppose tyranny because he is himself tyranny. He is the reality of the supreme welfare state in its conspiracy of the ages to manipulate humanity against itself. Collectivism is the foundation of the New World Order. It is supreme and total deception.
The global elite are on a path toward the final and total annihilation of Western civilization. The plan is ancient; to absorb the West into the East with no remnants of racial or religious identity remaining.
The so-called War on Terror is part and parcel of the elite’s plan and is designed as a war on the American people, Western civilization and the Christian faith. The sooner we recognize this terrorist façade as a spiritual war on Christianity and the faithful, the sooner we can begin to throw off the gross deception and see it  for what it is.
Abroad, the U.S. and its proxies are destabilizing regimes and creating breeding grounds for Islamists who are then employed for many purposes, including further destabilization, as controlled opposition and to carry out terror attacks which naturally lead to calls for more government controls to “keep us safe” and to “fight terror.”
The destabilization naturally created a swarm of refugees who sought to flee the violence and destruction being meted out by the U.S., NATO and the Islamists. The European globalists – and to some extent the U.S. – opened its doors to a mass migration of immigrants bringing their anti-Christian religion. In Europe, however, this was merely overkill. For all intents and purposes, true Christianity has long since been eradicated in most of Europe.
The Mohammedans are also the global elite’s tools for ripping Christianity out by its roots. ISIS – created, funded and enabled by the West – is slaughtering Middle Eastern Christians and destroying historically significant Christian buildings, artifacts and symbols. The goal is the destruction of the roots, history and birthplace of the Bible in order to erase Christianity from the face of the Earth, allowing the elites to write a pseudo-religious history in their own interests.
Mohammedans are the perfect tools for the elites’ objectives as the founder of the Islamic cult was a pedophilic camel and jewel thief who hijacked caravans and sacked villages to build his empire. Mohammed was the perfect communist, for he destroyed entire cities, slaughtering everyone including women and children who did not bow to Allah’s Kabah, the magic cube of stone which became the primary icon of Freemasonry’s compass-and-square, the design inspiration for Moscow’s Red Square, and the basis of mind-altering modern art.
Mohammed was also the perfect fascist, as Hitler imitated him, consolidating political power by incorporating the most popular tenets of world religions into his own universalism.
The American system is fascism labeled as democracy. So if we really see the emperor with no clothes, we see the political fronts thusly: Communism = Socialism = Fascism = Democracy. And we see the spiritual fronts as Judaism = Islam = Freemasonry. The deception prevails when we see these as separate and not as the same.
Here at home both the state and local governments are equally engaged in a war on Christianity. It began in earnest in the first half of the 20th Century when the Supreme Court turned the Bill of Rights on its ear and created from whole cloth – and against more than 150 years of historical precedent – that the 1st Amendment erected a “wall of separation” between church and state. Prior to that from the founding of America, the Bible had been  used as a textbook and school books regularly referenced and/or quoted Holy Scripture. In 1781, Congress even approved the purchase of Bibles to be used in schools.
From there we have come to the point that the mention of the Christian God and his Son or referencing the Bible in schools is prohibited and Christian prayer and religious symbols are banned while whole courses are devoted to pushing the Muslim religion on students and they are made to recite Islamic tenets or wear Islamic dress as a form of classroom study.
The First Liberty Institute has documented 1,200 instances of government-on-Christian persecution, according to its Senior Counsel Ken Klukowski. Many of them can be read about here. These range from bans on the wearing of crucifixes in schools to attempts to prohibit children from carrying Bibles to assaults on those who would pray in public meetings to forcing business owners to cater to the sodomites to the Obamacare assault on businesses and institutions (Hobby Lobby, Little Sisters of the Poor, etc.) who oppose abortion and don’t want to provide for it in mandated health insurance plans.
And as in Europe, politicians in the U.S. have opened the doors to a mass migration of anti-Christian immigrants, with special accommodations being made for so-called “refugees” from the regimes the U.S. has helped to destabilize. Note, however, that any Christian refugees from those countries are excluded except in rare instances.
The influx of immigrants brings with them a collectivist mentality along with their anti-Christian values.
The collectivist mentality lures mankind into guidance from “higher authorities” (government). The crowd wants prepackaged truth and human “freedom” as granted by government authority instead of using their own consciousness for making decisions and determining their own actions. Hence, they are easily deceived and manipulated under some altruistic nonsense.
Collective man wants the external authority of government instead of the spirit and mind of Christ. The animal farm is that world arena wherein man collectively surrenders himself, his personal being and his ego to the collective and obedient faith in government authority.
It’s all very simple. A crowd can be manipulated into an altered state of consciousness (Hitler’s torchlight parades) finally evolving into a growing attitude of docility, whereas an individualistic person cannot be so easily manipulated.
The state always considers that a self-sufficient and independent thinker is a threat to collectivism and its efforts to deceive the masses. Since the Christian takes on the being and Spirit of Christ, his total allegiance is or should be to the Living God. He will not sacrifice himself for “the common good” or “higher causes.” He cannot be manipulated by the State.
The welfare state must absolutely keep the people from the individualistic tendency of thinking for themselves.
Government parasites extract their wealth, power and pomp from mass deception based upon altruistic sacrifices of the workers and producers of wealth. Their greatest fear is that this will be revealed.
Human liberty is of God, not a privilege of the state, hence the ongoing war to eradicate Christianity.

Government’s surveillance and its stifling of his speech should terrify us.

Now that the government’s made toast of the others, it sticks a fork in the 1st Amendment, too

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billofrights0624_imageA filmmaker recently revealed why he shot his movie abroad rather than at home: he fears his government. Can you identify the regime he escaped?
We moved to Germany, because we did not feel comfortable in _____. We felt like we were at risk [in ____]. We didn’t know what [____‘s agents] might do, so we ended up in Munich…”
Was the producer referring to North Korea? China? Russia, perhaps?
Nope. Oliver Stone was speaking about the good ol’ USSA. He “didn’t know what the NSA might do,” given that his upcoming movie, “Snowden,” presents Heroic Ed as “a historical figure of great consequence.” So he moved production overseas. Even there, the feds’ long arm shook its fist at him: “Problems arose with companiesthat had connections to the U.S., he said: ‘… BMW couldn’t even help us in any way in Germany.’”
Funding also posed problems. “’No studio would support [the film,’ Stone] said. ‘It was extremely difficult to finance…’ Eventually, financing came through from France and Germany. … ‘It’s a very strange thing to do (a story about) an American man, and not be able to finance this movie in America. And that’s very disturbing, if you think about its implications on any subject that is not overtly pro-American. They say we have freedom of expression, but thought is financed, and thought is controlled, and the media is controlled. This country is very tight on that, and there’s no criticism allowed at a certain level.’”
Perhaps Stone’s feigning. After all, pretending paranoia over the NSA is brilliant publicity for a picture about the agency’s arch-enemy, Ed Snowden.
But what if he isn’t? How far we’ve fallen, that two-bit politicians and bureaucrats tyrannize powerful producers into seeking asylum!

Regardless of your opinion of Stone and Snowden, a government so hostile to dissidents, to freedom of thought and of expression, should not only shame but very much worry us. If the feds can intimidate a Hollywood honcho as influential as Stone, what chance do the rest of us stand against them?
Nor is Stone the only casualty of this war on the 1st Amendment. “Conservative radio host Glenn Beck is under investigation after a comment he made on his radio show when talking about GOP front-runner Donald Trump…” It seems that Beck and his producer, Stu Burguiere, were joking on-air; the latter mocked Beck’s comment about Trump, to which Beck replied, “‘If I was close enough and I had a knife. Really. I mean the stabbing just wouldn’t stop.” Both men insist that Beck was responding to Burguiere and in no way threatening to stab Trump. But that doesn’t matter to the Secret Service. It “will conduct an appropriate follow-up investigation.”
Seriously? Have these bullies nothing better to do on our taxes? Again, regardless of our opinion of Glenn Beck, the government’s surveillance and its stifling of his speech should terrify us.
And especially so because such censorship is moving from entertainment’s moguls to us: “Attorney General Loretta Lynch acknowledged … that there have been discussions within the Department of Justice about possibly pursuing civil action against so-called climate change deniers.”
Yep, our rulers aim to punish those who reject a discredited myth. Ergo, they are investigating “legal” theories that justify such abhorrent totalitarianism — and there is one, believe it or not, which may be even more tragic than this ham-fisted censorship: “Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) … [drew] a comparison between possible civil action against climate change deniers and civil action that the Clinton administration…”
The Clinton administration? This despotism is 25 years old?
“… pursued against the tobacco industry for claiming that the science behind the dangers of tobacco was unsettled.”
Actually, such despotism is far older than a quarter-century: it dates back a full one, to 1919 and the Supreme Court’s wickedness inSchenck v. United States.
When President Woodrow Wilson dragged reluctant Americans into World War I, he had to draft men for his army: sensible citizens refused to die in European trenches. Dissidents published pamphlets against such legalized kidnapping, urging its victims to resist. The government arrested two Socialists for distributing this literature; they protested that the 1st Amendment protected such speech.
Naturally, the judiciary defended the Feds’ warmongering: “…in many places and in ordinary times, the defendants, in saying all that was said in the circular, would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done. The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic.”
What a false analogy! Shouting “Fire!” in a theater is an issue of property rights, not of speech; it pertains to the 1st Amendment as much as robbing a gun shop does the 2nd Amendment (and in a free country, the theater’s owner, not rulers, would decide his response to the jerk threatening his business). Yet the modern state bases much of its infringing of the 1st Amendment on this deranged decision. No wonder we endure such travesties as prosecuting trespassers on trumped-up “civil-rights charges.”
Against all evidence, Americans insist that their country is “free.” We cannot build a shed on our property without buying a bureaucrat’s permission; ditto to owning guns and certain drugs. We board planes only after submitting to official sexual assault. We light our homes with the bulbs our rulers prefer, and we fill our cars with gas whose formula the EPA dictates at prices it artificially inflates. If a cop’s so inclined, he can murder us with impunity. Bureaucrats and politicians have invalidated de facto most of the Bill of Rights; they’ve curtailed and encroached on the few freedoms left until our liberties are too weak to do us any good or our rulers any harm.
But because we can still mildly criticize those who lord it over us, Americans cooperate with our masters in calling ourselves free.
–Becky Akers

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