There's a real, live journalist in Cincinnatti!
...When an application for tax exempt status comes into the IRS, agents
have 270 days to work through that application. If the application is
not processed within those 270 days it automatically triggers flags in
the system. When that happens, individual agents are required to input a
status update on that individual case once a month, every month until
the case is resolved.
Keep in mind, at least 300 groups were targeted out of Cincinnati
alone. Those applications spent anywhere from 18 months to nearly 3
years in the system and some still don't have their non-profit status.
300 groups multiplied by at least 18 months for each group, means
thousands of red flags would have been generated in the system.
So who in the chain of command would have received all these flags?
The answer, according to the IRS directory, one woman in Cincinnati,
Cindy Thomas, the Program Manager of the Tax Exempt Division. Because
all six of our IRS workers have different individual and territory
managers, Cindy Thomas is one manager they all have common.
It turns out Cindy Thomas' name is one we have heard before. The
independent journalism group ProPublica says in November of 2012 they
had requested information on conservatives groups that had received
non-profit status. Along with that information, the IRS released
private information on nine conservative groups that had not yet been
approved and personal information had not been redacted. The person who
signed off on that release, Cindy Thomas.
There's no question that "Goon-ette" Thomas had support from above and that there are similar Goons and Goon-ettes in other IRS non-profit review offices in Virginia and California.
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