Welcome to the next Third Reich. You can allow your mind to rest and allow Big Brother to do your thinking for you. Biden is in the process of hiring 87,000 new IRS agents. They are issued a gun and a new pair of jackboots. If you think I am kidding you, I assure you I am not. Today I am going to tell you a story about one of these agents and I hope you realize that you could be next.
This story has caught the eye of Rep Jim Jordan, who has been investigating the weaponizing of the federal government under Joe Biden. He is demanding all of the documents relating to this nightmare created by an IRS stooge.
Jordan said:
“We have recently received allegations that an Internal Revenue Service agent provided a false name to an Ohio taxpayer as part of a deception to gain entry into the taxpayer’s home to confront her about delinquent tax filings. When the taxpayer rightfully objected to the agent’s tactics, the IRS agent insisted that he ‘can go into anyone’s house at any time’ as an IRS agent. These allegations raise serious concerns about the IRS’s commitment to fundamental civil liberties.”
First, the IRS knocked on @mtaibbi’s door while he was testifying.
Now, we learn they harassed one of our constituents who didn’t do anything wrong.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELAnd to top it off, the IRS agent used a fake name to enter the constituent’s home. pic.twitter.com/EJX0Qlynte
— Rep. Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) June 17, 2023
Now, to the story. A woman was home and there was a knock on the door. It was a man who identified himself falsely in order to gain entrance to her house. Once inside he told her that she owed taxes from an estate in which she was fiduciary. The estate was probated and the money was dispersed. She then called her lawyer who told her to make the man leave. But, he wouldn’t. He then told her that he can “go into anyone’s house at any time.” He was there using the name, Bill Haus. That could very well be an alias.
The woman called the police and an officer told the IRS agent that he must stay away from the woman. Haus then filed a complaint against the officer with the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.
The taxpayer later spoke with Haus’ supervisor on May 4 who informed her that nothing was owed on the estate and that “things never should have gotten this far,” according to the letter. The case was then closed the following day.
As a result, Jordan ordered the IRS to send all documents and communications on this incident to the committee, including all communication between the agency and the Treasury Department or “any other Executive Branch entity” with a deadline of June 30 at 5 p.m., according to the letter.
“This behavior from an IRS agent to an American taxpayer—providing an alias, using deception to secure entry into the taxpayer’s home, and then filing an Inspector General complaint against a police officer examining that matter—is highly concerning,” Jordan wrote in the letter.
The IRS has come under scrutiny recently after an agent showed up unannounced at the home of independent journalist Matt Taibbi in May while he was testifying to the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government.
Jordan and the IRS did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.




















