This Grandmother Didn't Submit the Proper Banking Form. Now the IRS Wants $2.1 Million From Her.
She’s asking the Supreme Court to consider whether this seizure is an excessive fine under the Eighth Amendment.

The IRS wants to seize more than $2 million from an elderly woman, whose family fled from Nazi Germany, for failing to report her father's endowment to her. Now, she's petitioning the Supreme Court to consider whether this is an unconstitutionally excessive fine.
The Institute for Justice, representing Monica Toth, an 82-year-old grandmother living in the Boston area, filed a petition with the Supreme Court on Friday asking them to determine whether federal "civil penalties" imposed by the federal government for violating regulations count as "fines." While a reasonable person might assume "penalties" and "fines" are the same thing, the federal government's position is that they are not, and, therefore, the IRS can demand millions in such penalties from people without triggering the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment.
Monica Toth's family fled Germany in the 1930s to escape rising fascism and antisemitism. Her family landed in Argentina, where she was born in 1940. Toth immigrated to the U.S. when she was 22 and established a family. She became a U.S. citizen in the 1980s.
Her father, who had in the meantime become a successful businessman, gifted Toth several million dollars in a Swiss bank account shortly before dying in 1999. The federal Bank Secrecy Act, passed in 1970, requires citizens to report various banking records and information to the government. It also requires any citizen with more than $10,000 in foreign bank accounts to fill out a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) annually.
Toth had not been filing these FBARs until 2010, which is when she says she discovered the requirement. According to the Institute for Justice, she had previously been filing her taxes by hand using forms from the local library. Once she knew of the requirement, she disclosed the existence of the account to the IRS and told them she hoped her filings would put her back into compliance with the law.
Things didn't go well for her. According to the Institute for Justice's filing, the IRS launched an audit in 2011. The agency determined that she underpaid her taxes in some years and overpaid in others. She paid $40,000 in penalties for her tax mistakes. Everything was settled. Her taxes were up to date.
But then the IRS came for her again because of her failure to file her FBARs. Under federal law, the maximum penalty for failing to file this record is either $100,000 or half the balance of the reported account, whichever is greater. The IRS declared that her failure to file the FBAR documentation was "reckless" and filed for half the money of the account, a civil penalty of more than $2.1 million. It doesn't matter whether Toth's failure to file the form deprived the IRS of taxes it was owed or whether she was actively trying to deceive the government. All that mattered was that she didn't file a proper record of the bank account that the IRS contends she should have known she needed to file.
The fight here is not over whether the federal government and the IRS have the power to penalize people for trying to conceal bank accounts from tax collectors. Rather, it's about whether taking $2.1 million from a citizen for simply not annually completing a one-page form can be considered an excessive fine that violates the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution's Bill of Rights.
The United States argues that it cannot because it does not believe that taking Toth's money should count as a "fine" at all. It is, instead, a "civil penalty" that is immune to scrutiny under the Eighth Amendment. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has agreed with the federal government and refused to even consider whether taking $2.1 million from Toth was "excessive." The Institute for Justice counters that this is clearly a type of fine.
"The Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause is a key check on the government's power to punish," said Institute for Justice Attorney Sam Gedge in a prepared statement. "That is why the Excessive Fines Clause is part of the Bill of Rights, and that is why the federal courts need to take it seriously."
The Institute for Justice has previously and successfully turned to the Supreme Court to set limits on the government's ability to seize people's assets and property. In Timbs v. Indiana (2019), the Court ruled unanimously that the Eighth Amendment applied to state-level asset forfeitures in a case where the state of Indiana seized an SUV from a man arrested for selling heroin and attempted to keep it. In that ruling, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that one of the purposes of the Eighth Amendment is to prevent the government from using fines not as a punishment but "as a source of revenue."
Toth has already made amends and paid fines for her mistakes with her IRS filings. In absence of evidence of deliberate fraud, it's hard not to see this grasping as anything other than an attempt by the IRS and the Department of Treasury to bring in some money. The Institute for Justice notes that Toth is far from alone here. There's been a recent escalation in the use of civil penalties by the federal government over FBAR filings: "Over the past decade, the government has expanded its FBAR enforcement relentlessly. Between 2012 and 2020, it assessed nearly $1.5 billion in FBAR penalties. This Term, it is asking the Court to ratify a still more aggressive regime."
Whenever you read about how the IRS needs more and better enforcers and will only target wealthy people who are deliberately trying to conceal their money, think about Toth's case. The IRS is looking for reasons to take huge sums of money from people without showing that these citizens have been engaging in actual misconduct. Worse still, this agency is also attempting to argue that seizing people's money and assets doesn't count as a fine and, therefore, the Eighth Amendment doesn't protect citizens against it.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Sounds like the IRS is in fact targeting only millionaires.
Multi millionaires
Not for long. Ten years she didn't report; first year takes half, second year takes half, ten years is 1/1024, how many years before it drops below $1M? I doubt she started as a billionaire.
I am creating eighty North American nation greenbacks per-hr. to finish some web services from home. I actually have not ever thought adore it would even realisable but (ani-06) my friend mate got $27k solely in four weeks simply doing this best assignment and conjointly she convinced Maine to avail. Look further details going this web-page.
.
---------->>> https://smartpay21.pages.dev
No. The IRS would most likely want to take 1/2 of the amount the account held each year. So the fact that she didn't pay out the penalty in the first year in immaterial. I'm assuming the initial disbursement into the account remained largely untouched over the years...
If they were smarter, they'd say
"In 1990, she had $10M in the account. She didn't file properly, so she owes $5M penalty for that year."
"In 1991, she had $10M in the account. She didn't file properly, so she owes $5M penalty for that year."
"In 1992, she had $10M in the account. She didn't file properly, so she owes $5M penalty for that year."
"In 1993, she had $10M in the account. She didn't file properly, so she owes $5M penalty for that year."
...
and so on. So what if that means she owes $50M penalties on a $10M account?
Biden's economic programs are so successful that soon, every American will be a millionaire!
After being without work for 6 months, I started completing a simple online work over this website I found online, and I couldn't be happier now. (res-11) Results... After 3 months of doing this my monthly income increased by 8900 per month by working for just several hours per week...Start by following the:-
.
Instructions here:>>> https://workofferweb24.pages.dev/
The FBAR penalties are punitive and IRS and FinCEN look at it as low-hanging fruit.
In that ruling, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that one of the purposes of the Eighth Amendment is to prevent the government from using fines not as a punishment but "as a source of revenue."
Now that's a fucking joke. State and local governments depend on fines as part of their budget, especially traffic enforcement
Also, THE+IRS = THEIRS.
Monica Toth's family fled Germany in the 1930s to escape rising fascism and antisemitism. Her family landed in Argentina, where she was born in 1940.
You know what other German nationals fled to Argentina?
No, [Spoiler Alert!] Laurence Olivier burned the list before anyone could read it!
Hisler?
The person you see in the mirror every morning?
Am I missing something, or did we just learn the creator of the KAR sock?
What does "grandmother" have to do with it? Why is that in the title or the article? There are billionaire grandmas, and there are moderately comfortable grandmas, and there are homeless grandmas. The "grandmother" part has no relevance whatsoever.
I thought libertarians were at least nominally opposed to emotionalism over logic?
Do you want to kill grandma?
Depends. Does she have me in her literal sights? Then yeah.
Does she have me in her literal sights
Or in her will?
She's comin' straight at us!
There are a lot of congressional grandmas in the democrat party.
I can't, I have no reindeer.
Hillary is a grandmother and Pelosi has nine grandchildren, and they're two of the most honest, forthright decent people ever.
You equate grandma with being a murdering whore.
Shame on you.
Two murdering whores.
To be fair, I don't think we can label Pelosi a murderer. Fraudster, alcoholic, embezzler, corrupt, bribable, liar, and indulgent sure, but no murderer. Now Hillary, she's got a body count.
She just has about 64 friends that committed suicide
Again, to be fair, they may just have considered death to be a preferable alternative to listening to the bitch speak. But, I can see your point.
By shooting themselves in the back of the head, twice.
After that statement, please get the help that you so desperately need. 🙂
Yeah, it doesn't matter how old she is or that she's a grandma. What matters is the the Feds are claiming that civil penalties are not fines. What the actual fuck?
BTW, where's Misek? Probably thinks she should be in jail anyway. For, you know, being one of those "lying" people.
It wouldn’t shock me if it turned out he is a serial killer of Jews.
The grandmother aspect means even less sympathy, since she'll soon be dead and they'll get what's left in estate taxes.
This is not "libertarians" speaking. This is Koch. They found a sympathetic plaintiff to de-fang the IRS, to further reward tax evasion by far less sympathetic wealthy individuals and corporations.
Perhaps. But it is still shocking that failure to file a form means government gets to claim massive amounts of money, well beyond any tax rate, and normal penalties and fines.
That it's civil, not criminal, "so they can get away with it", makes it worse because it puts the cart before the horse.
", to further reward tax evasion "
This is a really dumb statement. She realized she was in error and she voluntarily started filing the proper form. Then the IRS audited her and applied $40K in additional taxes and penalties. At that point the issue should have been over. She had paid her taxes, and she had paid the associated penalties. But the IRS decided to go with the maximum possible penalty for someone who voluntarily reported their mistake. That's jackbooted greed and just confirms most people loathing of the IRS.
The IRS is there to enforce communist manifesto plank 2, as added to the Constitution just in time for WW1. Nearly every crash in history can be traced back to that communist plank and equally fanatical prohibition laws. Nixon tasked the IRS with an additional duty: to subsidize looter parties so as to submerge the LP.
Also sprach der KPD, (Kommunistischen Partei Deutschlands)
The federal Bank Secrecy Act, passed in 1970, requires citizens to report various banking records and information to the government. It also requires any citizen with more than $10,000 in foreign bank accounts to fill out a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) annually.
Ah, yes, the "Don't say BS or FUBAR" bill.
This is why killdozers are built.
Was that movie any good?
If we are talking about the Netflix documentary "Tread" where a professional welder armored up a bulldozer, welded himself inside, and rolled around Granby, CO destroying everything in sight because the good-ole-boys club decided to use government bureaucracy to hinder his business, then yes.
The 1974 B-movie? Never saw that one.
I didn't know there was a Netflix documentary. Now I want to watch it.
That could have been a documendacity as easily as it could have been objective. The plot hinges on whether the guy was a delusional whack job like, say, Robert Dear, and though no real evidence was produced, much was asserted as to motive. The guy was clearly a competent welder--unlike the gang that was supposed to protect the citizens from such rampages.
won't somebody PLEEEAAASSSEEE think of the millionaires?!
Injustices done to millionaires are less unjust? The government abusing its authority is a danger to all.
Apparently you do, and how much of their stuff you can take.
If you look at the numbers, most millionaires are older middle-to-upper class professionals who are at or approaching retirement. If you properly prepare for retirement, you will likely be a millionaire by the time you retire.
If you even want to make the poverty line from dividends, you require nearly $200k in investments. 401Ks and IRAs get big for this reason.
This woman was filing her taxes by hand before she got the inheritance. There's no mens rea. There's no harm. Even if it's technically a legal fine, it is neither just nor justified in this circumstance.
"If you properly prepare for retirement, you will likely be a millionaire by the time you retire."
The grasshoppers of society don't like the ants having all that money. It's a giant pile of loot and they want to have a vote on who it belongs to.
Thanks for your response, Ben, it saves me the trouble of saying substantially the same thing.
I can confirm this with simple math. One needs to invest merely $4,000 per year at 8% over the course of a career to be a millionaire by retirement. The vast majority of middle-income people can save considerably more than that.
The IRS wants to seize more than $2 million from an elderly woman, whose family fled from Nazi Germany
Sounds like the Nazis finally tracked her down.
Thank goodness we doubled the size of that agency so they can provide such wonderful customer service to more and more Americans.
...and they're going to DOUBLE their numbers, somehow, so I bet these issues will not continue on...
You know who hits the lottery and collects millions everyday? The Feds. 40% off the top of your once in ten lifetimes prize.
It's fun to divide the combined federal, state, and local spending total of $10T by 330M Americans to get $30,000 spending per person. Family counts vary all over, but are roughly 100M, so $100,000 for every family People think a decimal point got misplaced.
Thank God we don't get as much government as we pay for!
Fuck the IRS. And Joe Biden.
And fuck the American government for having these laws.
You know, only the US taxes your income globally, even if you never set foot in the states during a year. The patriot act banking regs are such a violation of privacy that in the early 00s EU banks wouldn't take American clients because they'd have to break local laws to submit to invasive inquiries from the IRS.
Of course, Uncle Joe wanted banks to report everything over $600, not just the $10000 that seemed like a lot of money generations ago. Because, you know, if you're doing nothing wrong you don't have to worry.
This year, if you sell more than $600 worth of junk on eBay, you will get a 1099.
We've already submitted, it is just another turn of the screw.
That's the way the ratchet tightens.
In 1970 when they made the $10K reporting requirement, 10K was a lot of damned money. That has to be like $75 or 80 thousand dollars today.
But it isn't indexed, so a generation later more and more small businesses who do cash transactions get butted up against it. Same shit happened with the AMT and a lot of other stuff once meant only to spy on "the rich". it always, eventually, snares more and more people, and it is never loosened.
Patriot act is all kinds of bullshit never used to stop terrorist financing, but that 1970 law was the camel's nose under the tent flap.
Didn't they sell the income tax as only applying to the richest people?
The tax on your phone was a tax on the rich. It was enacted to pay for the Spanish-American War back in the 1890s. Back then only rich people had phones. Now everyone does, even most poor people.
Buy I paid $6000 originally for that junk. Can I take a $5400 capital loss deduction? I'm not making money on eBay - I'm losing money.
Former panhandling students will be surprised to see "loan forgiveness" on IRS tax forms... but it's already there.
And they also, seize your money if you deposit less than 10K but in a suspicious way known as "structuring". South Mountain Creamery found that out the hard way. Those ne'er-do-wells, were trying to help the local teller avoid filing the paperwork for their deposits and had their funds seized.
There was a store somewhere whose daily receipts were $7K or so, and after a while, they got dinged for trying to restructure. It eventually got overturned, but geez, how dumb do you have to be to be an IRS agent?
"how dumb do you have to be to be an IRS agent?"
It's not about being dumb. It's about bullying people and about pushing hard enough that you know you'll get your way occasionally.
Christ, what assholes.
They spelled "FBAR" wrong. The proper spelling of that acronym, and most things having anything to do with the IRS, is "F.U.B.A.R."
Calling something a different name and therefore claiming the rules do not apply is such childish level of cleverness.
Cruel and unusual punishment also comes to mind.
This is why we need more new, armed, IRS agents then the number of US soldiers sent against the Nazi defenses at Normandy!
87,000 new agents authorized
(57,000 ground troops, 15,500 airborne, invaded Normandy on June 6th)
Eliminate the IRS. It's more important that getting rid of public schools even.
That's in the original LP platform, same one that says to shitcan girl-bullying Comstock laws.
Once she knew of the requirement, she disclosed the existence of the account to the IRS and told them she hoped her filings would put her back into compliance with the law.
Emphasis added. "Hey, Agent Smith, we got a live one!"
Hey, the IRS has to pay for those 87,000 new agents somehow...
This is why the IRS wants 87k new employees. They desire more bodies to harass people trying to do the right thing.
Abolish the IRS.
Why do you want to abolish the military? Yes, some idiot actually equated the two.
We're talking about them prosecuting someone who engaged in outright, flagrant, stupid tax evasion. 'Trying to do the right thing' indeed!
100k per year or half the balance, so she has a balance of 4 million 200 thousand if they want 2.1 mil
Lots of European residents are shedding their American Passports the way they shed Christian National Socialist German and Austrian passports from 1933 to 1945.
She has at least 4 mil in the bank yet she doesn't just pay a few hundred dollars and have an accountant do her taxes, instead she files with paper from the library. Do I believe she accidentally didn't file this paperwork? Maybe, but it seems suspicious, and it matters not at all because ignorance doesn't constitute a defense.
Tax accountants frequently make mistakes.
The problem is that the tax code is far too complex.
Worse yet, it doesn't even matter whether you are right; if you claim all the exemptions you may be entitled to, you may end up being audited, making it not worth it.
Obama's Treasury Secretary forgot to file or pay his Social Security and Medicare taxes for 4 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Geithner#Nomination_and_confirmation
Geithner was supposed to be an expert in finance, rather than a grandmother doing her own taxes in the library. We are supposed to believe that he was unaware, not of an obscure part of the tax code like reporting foreign bank accounts, but of a tax that every American working at a domestic job sees on every pay stub.
Ignorance would actually be a (partial) defense, because they can't take half the balance unless the violation is willful.
Of course, the fact that this penalty is increased for willful violations really puts the lie to the government and court's contention that this was not a punishment (even if the court says "we do not see why" this is so. You don't see because you're intentionally blind. Seizing half the account cannot be "remedial" unless the government can show that they suffered losses of an amount at least equal to that.)
On the other hand, I don't know if this is the case to make a stand on. The lady dodged the process server, refused to get a lawyer for a while, and apparently stonewalled enough on discovery to get the court to issue sanctions in the form of stipulations in the case - including the stipulation that her conduct was, in fact, willful.
"the fact that this penalty is increased for willful violations really puts the lie to the government and court's contention that this was not a punishment"
They don't claim it isn't a punishment, they claim it's justified as a penalty. And, what your statement is 'really putting the lie to' is the Reason characterisation of the facts here.
The reality is that this was a willful and v poorly planned attempt at tax evasion, she got caught, they negotiated the back taxes, and now they're doing her for tax evasion. Who'd choose this hill to die on?
Have you seen any article on the death penalty? "They weren't murdered that badly" is standard fare.
Also sprach der KPD.
People who head federal courts can't define 'woman.' How can you expect them to define 'fine'or 'excessive?'
Governments have two sources of revenue, taxes and fines.
And of course there's the printing press.
87k useless eaters.
87k of new, reliable Democrat voters, bought by Uncle Sam.
Fines and penalties not the same? What kind if semantic bullshit are the courts letting them get away with?
We are going to start collecting "tribute". Sorry fucker taxes and tribute are not the same. Limits on one don't impact the other.
And this is BEFORE Biden's brownshirt brigade of 87,000 revenue generators have even been hired! Yeah...they're only going after billionaires. Sure they are.
Just put her in prison. Let her be an example to all grandmothers.
With the IRS, tax payers are deemed guilty until proven guilty. This is clearly wrong. The IRS would be dissolved and eliminated.
Reason: Where libertarian principles are buried deep, lest they frighten the masses.
If God had wanted me to pay taxes to the IRS, he would have made the instructions easier to read so I could actually do it myself instead of relying on someone with an advanced degree to interpret the rules for me.
Do I understand this article correctly? If so, she still has $2.1 million in the bank.
The loophole is not even hidden. Nothing in the Bill of Rights says the federal government can't rob and murder you. I can find hundreds of looter lawyers willing to swear that robbery and murder aren't fines. They will defy YOU to point to where the Constitution--not the Declaration--or a law says federal agents may not rob and murder citizens. Lysander Spooner pointed this out in 1868! All jurisprudence during National Prohibition established that federal agents could murder for no reason and get out of jail free. See Millard Tydings
Where in the Constitution was the power to "rob and murder" law abiding citizens delegated to the federal government?
Tyranny!
“Where the people fear the government, you have tyranny. Where the government fears the people, you have liberty.” -Barnhill, John Basil (1914).
-Excerpt from the semi-fictional novel, Retribution Fever:
“An unlimited power to tax involves, necessarily, a power to destroy.” -Daniel Webster (1819)
The income-tax had fostered all that had affrighted both Federalists and Anti-Federalists. It gave the federal government unbridled power to invade the privacy of every American — adult and child — and selectively to destroy individual persons, single enterprises, and whole industries.
Its enforcing agency, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), had operated in a manner similar to the Nazi’s Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo) or the Secret State Police in Germany. Its tyrannical tactics illustrated the worst sort of economic management by punishing rather than rewarding creativity and productivity. Worse, in promoting dishonesty, the income tax made criminals of most Americans, even accountants, who found the increasing complexity and laborious length of its so-called code and the forms derived therefrom invidious, incomprehensible, and intolerable. Americans were spending more than 6-billion, counter-productive hours annually to comply with the federal tax-code. Moreover, it was being used politically to persecute organizations and persons repeatedly while guilty bureaucrats within the IRS went unpunished for their illegal acts even when made public.