More FOIA evidence

The IRS found another 38 pages they somehow overlooked. Thirty-one of those pages were illegally redacted in their entirety. But one of the five they did not redact includes more evidence of their crimes. In an email from IRS CI agent Justin Cole to his then boss, the former IRS CI Chief Jim Lee, which copied the current IRS CI Chief Guy Ficco, plus five other IRS agents, Cole assured Lee that when he spoke to the N.Y. Times reporter about their investigation of my bank, the name “Peter Schiff never came out of my mouth,” but that the N.Y. Times took some liberties with his comments. Clearly, he was told by his boss not to mention my name. They had been falsely implying that my bank was guilty of tax evasion and money laundering, knowing that it was innocent, so they wanted to be careful not to accuse me personally of those crimes so as not to expose themselves to liability. They were happy to allow the N.Y. Times to do their dirty work.

Cole wrote his boss that there was nothing in the N.Y. Times article that he was “worried about.” If he had done nothing wrong, why would he be worried? He was reassuring his boss that nothing in the N.Y. Times article would implicate them in their illegal conspiracy to frame and destroy my bank or would give me justification to file a lawsuit. He also commented that the recent N.Y. Times article demonstrated there was “continued interest” in the story and that he was sticking to their agreed on talking points. The story their were telling was that my bank was guilty of facilitating tax evasion and money laundering, and that it was shut down as a result of the J5 investigation, which supposedly found evidence to confirm those crimes, despite no charges being filed. Cole also assured Lee that he was sticking to their talking point. But they were covering up the truth that my bank was completely innocent and that the OCIF Commissioner shut it down for the sole purpose of created the false impression that their failed Atlantis Investigation was a success.