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#1
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Although the IRS might not have a direct law relating to such instances, I would think federal mail or wire fraud statutes could be applied if they so choose. Of course, the IRS might not even care and just throw the letter out.
Also, if the complaint is way off base and causes economic harm to beanie...I'm sure you could claim some sort of tortious interference or something. But, I am cobbling this together from a conversation with a lawyer type person and my extensive knowledge resulting from my Intro to Business Law class. So...who knows.
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"And that's how you play aces." Yeah, you make kings run in to them. |
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#2
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For a libel / defamation claim the plaintiff has to prove that the defendant made a false written statement, published that statement, knew it was false all along and it caused damage to the plaintiff. The next-to-last part, knowing it was false, is the hardest to prove. The defendant is always going to take the position that he thought the statement he published about the plaintiff was true.
I'm sure there's probably some federal law that prohibits making false statements to the IRS, but again, you'd have to prove that the person making the statements knew they were false.
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