{"title":"防止国会侵犯纳税人隐私","authors":"G. Yin","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.2628193","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article claims that the U.S. House Ways & Means Committee violated the law in 2014 when it voted (strictly along party lines) to release to the public the tax return information of 51 taxpayers. The committee acted under the belief that an obscure tax law provision authorized its action. But the provision required the committee to have a legitimate purpose for the disclosures and — incredibly — the committee failed to satisfy this almost trivial, common-sense restriction. Although the disclosures occurred in connection with the committee’s allegations of possible criminal misconduct by a high-ranking IRS official (Lois Lerner), most of the return information released was completely unrelated to the oversight objective and no disclosure was necessary to support the committee’s claims. In fact, there does not appear to have been any purpose whatsoever for the disclosures other than possibly providing a partisan political advantage to the committee majority. Because the Speech or Debate Clause of the Constitution insulated the committee from prosecution for the violation, the incident reveals a serious gap in taxpayer privacy protections. A future tax committee, for no legitimate reason, might release with impunity the return information of any taxpayer, including sensitive information belonging to a political enemy of those controlling the committee at the time.To prevent that outcome, this article proposes a new restriction on the access of the tax committees to tax return information. If the committees cannot obtain the information in the first instance, then they will be unable to disclose it for improper purposes. The proposal respects the legitimate need of the tax committees for the information by giving exclusive access to a Congressional staff intermediary who would be responsible for conveying necessary information to the tax committees while preventing improper disclosures. If, as claimed in this article, the intermediary’s actions would likely not be protected by the Speech or Debate Clause, then restrictions placed on the intermediary’s discretion in order to protect taxpayer privacy rights could be adequately enforced. Since today’s majority on a committee may obviously be tomorrow’s minority, it behooves every legislator to take action to prevent illegitimate disclosures in the future.","PeriodicalId":405138,"journal":{"name":"LSN: Constitutional Law (Topic)","volume":"56 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Preventing Congressional Violations of Taxpayer Privacy\",\"authors\":\"G. Yin\",\"doi\":\"10.2139/SSRN.2628193\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This article claims that the U.S. House Ways & Means Committee violated the law in 2014 when it voted (strictly along party lines) to release to the public the tax return information of 51 taxpayers. The committee acted under the belief that an obscure tax law provision authorized its action. But the provision required the committee to have a legitimate purpose for the disclosures and — incredibly — the committee failed to satisfy this almost trivial, common-sense restriction. Although the disclosures occurred in connection with the committee’s allegations of possible criminal misconduct by a high-ranking IRS official (Lois Lerner), most of the return information released was completely unrelated to the oversight objective and no disclosure was necessary to support the committee’s claims. In fact, there does not appear to have been any purpose whatsoever for the disclosures other than possibly providing a partisan political advantage to the committee majority. Because the Speech or Debate Clause of the Constitution insulated the committee from prosecution for the violation, the incident reveals a serious gap in taxpayer privacy protections. A future tax committee, for no legitimate reason, might release with impunity the return information of any taxpayer, including sensitive information belonging to a political enemy of those controlling the committee at the time.To prevent that outcome, this article proposes a new restriction on the access of the tax committees to tax return information. If the committees cannot obtain the information in the first instance, then they will be unable to disclose it for improper purposes. The proposal respects the legitimate need of the tax committees for the information by giving exclusive access to a Congressional staff intermediary who would be responsible for conveying necessary information to the tax committees while preventing improper disclosures. If, as claimed in this article, the intermediary’s actions would likely not be protected by the Speech or Debate Clause, then restrictions placed on the intermediary’s discretion in order to protect taxpayer privacy rights could be adequately enforced. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这篇文章声称,2014年,美国众议院筹款委员会(House Ways & Means Committee)投票(严格按照党派界限)向公众公布51名纳税人的纳税申报表信息,违反了法律。委员会的行动是基于一项模糊的税法条款授权其行动的信念。但该条款要求委员会对披露信息有一个合法的目的,令人难以置信的是,委员会未能满足这一几乎微不足道的常识性限制。尽管这些披露与委员会对国税局高级官员(Lois Lerner)可能存在的犯罪行为的指控有关,但所公布的大多数申报表信息与监督目标完全无关,也没有必要披露以支持委员会的主张。事实上,除了可能为委员会多数派提供党派政治优势之外,这些披露似乎没有任何目的。由于宪法的言论或辩论条款使该委员会免受起诉,因此该事件暴露了纳税人隐私保护的严重漏洞。未来的税务委员会可能会在没有正当理由的情况下,不受惩罚地公布任何纳税人的报税信息,包括当时控制该委员会的人的政治敌人的敏感信息。为了防止这种结果,本文提出了对税务委员会获取纳税申报信息的新限制。如果委员会不能在第一时间获得信息,那么他们就不能出于不正当目的披露信息。该提案尊重税务委员会对信息的合法需求,允许国会工作人员中介独家访问,该中介将负责向税务委员会传达必要的信息,同时防止不当披露。如果如本文所述,中介机构的行为很可能不受言论或辩论条款的保护,那么为了保护纳税人的隐私权而对中介机构自由裁量权施加的限制可以得到充分执行。由于今天在委员会中的多数很明显可能是明天的少数,因此每个立法者都应该采取行动防止未来的非法披露。
Preventing Congressional Violations of Taxpayer Privacy
This article claims that the U.S. House Ways & Means Committee violated the law in 2014 when it voted (strictly along party lines) to release to the public the tax return information of 51 taxpayers. The committee acted under the belief that an obscure tax law provision authorized its action. But the provision required the committee to have a legitimate purpose for the disclosures and — incredibly — the committee failed to satisfy this almost trivial, common-sense restriction. Although the disclosures occurred in connection with the committee’s allegations of possible criminal misconduct by a high-ranking IRS official (Lois Lerner), most of the return information released was completely unrelated to the oversight objective and no disclosure was necessary to support the committee’s claims. In fact, there does not appear to have been any purpose whatsoever for the disclosures other than possibly providing a partisan political advantage to the committee majority. Because the Speech or Debate Clause of the Constitution insulated the committee from prosecution for the violation, the incident reveals a serious gap in taxpayer privacy protections. A future tax committee, for no legitimate reason, might release with impunity the return information of any taxpayer, including sensitive information belonging to a political enemy of those controlling the committee at the time.To prevent that outcome, this article proposes a new restriction on the access of the tax committees to tax return information. If the committees cannot obtain the information in the first instance, then they will be unable to disclose it for improper purposes. The proposal respects the legitimate need of the tax committees for the information by giving exclusive access to a Congressional staff intermediary who would be responsible for conveying necessary information to the tax committees while preventing improper disclosures. If, as claimed in this article, the intermediary’s actions would likely not be protected by the Speech or Debate Clause, then restrictions placed on the intermediary’s discretion in order to protect taxpayer privacy rights could be adequately enforced. Since today’s majority on a committee may obviously be tomorrow’s minority, it behooves every legislator to take action to prevent illegitimate disclosures in the future.