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FBI Arrests Jan Lindsey, Anti-Tax Activist Featured in “Freedom to Fascism”

Started by keith in RI, March 07, 2009, 11:08 AM NHFT

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keith in RI

  FBI Arrests Jan Lindsey, Anti-Tax Activist Featured in "Freedom to Fascism"

KTNV
March 7, 2009

Federal agents raid Las Vegas locations

Federal agents swarmed into a local business and home early Thursday morning.

Several men are facing charges ranging from owning machine guns to evading taxes.

One of the raids forced a school into lockdown.

One of the suspects appeared in court shortly after his arrest, and that's when things got even more interesting.

Armored personnel carriers, federal agents wearing tactical gear, blanketing a Northwest Las Vegas neighborhood early Thursday morning.

It's little wonder J Suson tried rubbng the sleep from his eyes a second time.

"I thought I was dreaming," he says.

But J wasn't, so he grabbed his camera, and an earful.

"Basically, [they were saying] we've got a search warrant, we need you to come out, a whole bunch of undercover FBI people everywhere," he says.

Agents arrested four people, Jan Allen Lindsey, a possible former special investigator for the same bureau, but openly outspoken against the government's collection of taxes.

"In the internal revenue code 26, there's nothing specific in there," he said in a documentary about taxes.

The IRS begs to differ.

Action news has obtained the indictment against Lindsey.

It alleges that from 1999 through 2006, he either didn't pay his income tax, or filed false forms.

The indictment also alleges Lindsey essentially tried to dupe the government by placing assets in third party names.

Agents raided a business as well.

All of their weaponry and armor was because at least one of the other suspects faces a federal firearms charge.

Agents also confiscated ammunition and reloading equipment from the home. The other two suspects face money laundering charges.

Lindsey was set to be arraigned Thursday, but would not allow a public defender to represent him.

He also said he refused to observe the judge's authority.

The arraignment had to be continued.

According to other documents obtained by Action News, Lindsey tried to sue the government in 2002 for seizing his property because he didn't pay taxes.

A judge threw it out, and ordered him to pay more than $1200 for a quote- "frivilous complaint."



More details revealed about those arrested in FBI raids Thursday

Some of the four men arrested during a series of raids Thursday by federal agents appeared in court Friday.

The FBI raided a Las Vegas business Thursday because after hours it was the meeting place of the People's Sovereign Court, a libertarian social organization with what some might call extreme anti-government views.

Its leader is Sam Davis whose name is on one of the Grand Jury indictments.

He's accused of laundering more than $500,000 that undercover agents said had been stolen from Wachovia.

Jan Lindsey is a former FBI agent himself who is featured in a documentary titled, "Freedom to Fascism".

It chronicles the legal battles of people who refused to pay their taxes.

Lindsey was in court Thursday, refusing to acknowledge the judge's jurisdiction.

"I want to make sure that you understand what the government says you did wrong. Whether your agree with it or not is for future litigation. You understand that sir," asked the judge.

"What the government says I did wrong," asked Lindsey.

"Yes, sir," replied the judge.

Two other men were arrested in the FBI raids.

Shawn Rice, accused in the indictment of laundering money also, by claiming to be a Rabbi, and taking the deposits as charitable contributions.

Harold Call was arrested on five counts of possessing machine guns and converting single-fire weapons illegally to automatic weapons.

Jim Johnson

http://www.lvrj.com/news/40891757.html

Las Vegas Review Journal

Mar. 07, 2009
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

Men arrested in raid have ties to anti-tax crusade

Retired FBI agent faces charges

By ADRIENNE PACKER
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Samuel Davis, left, Jan Lindsey and Shawn Rice appear in federal court on charges stemming from a raid Thursday. The men, along with a fourth defendant, Herald Call, were released pending trial.
Illustration by David Stroud.

Jan Lindsey served as a special agent with the FBI until 1995, when he retired in good standing from the agency and eventually became involved in an anti-tax, anti-government movement.

Now Lindsey faces the possibility of meeting the same fate as one of the tax protester movement's more notorious leaders, 81-year-old Irwin Schiff, who was convicted of tax crimes in 2006 and is now in prison.

Lindsey, 66, was one of four Las Vegas Valley men arrested Thursday in a raid orchestrated by the Joint Terrorism Task Force, an arm of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Herald Call was charged with possession of an unregistered weapon. Shawn Rice, who once worked with the CIA, and Samuel Davis were charged with conspiracy and money laundering.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Johnson said all four defendants belong to the sovereign movement, which does not believe in the authority of the federal government.

The task force investigated the case because of threats allegedly made toward law enforcement and Internal Revenue Service agents. Investigators raided properties in Las Vegas, Idaho and Arizona.

FBI Special Agent David Staretz said the charges have nothing to do with the foursome's beliefs or ideologies.

"When the members go from First Amendment rights to the realm of criminal activity, that's when the federal government has an interest," Staretz said.

All four pleaded not guilty to the charges and were released by U.S. Magistrate Judge Lawrence Leavitt until their trial dates, initially scheduled for May. Leavitt prohibited the men from possessing firearms or explosives. None of the defendants have prior criminal histories.

Inside Call's home at 8208 Gunther Circle, near Alta and Buffalo drives, authorities on Thursday discovered three illegal machine guns, 27 other types of pistols and guns and two grenades, Johnson said. A bunker equipped with a substantial amount of food was found behind a hidden door in a closet and a surveillance camera trained on the front yard was set up in the garage.

Johnson said neighbors reported that Call, 67, advised them to stay inside their homes if they ever saw police or IRS agents at his residence because there would be "firearms exchanged," Johnson said.

"He intended to shoot Internal Revenue Service agents," said Johnson, who argued the men should remain in custody.

In a recorded telephone conversation, Lindsey is heard saying that if the government continues to interfere with citizens' assets, weapons will be used and there will be a "full-blown revolution," Johnson said.

Lindsey, who has lived in Las Vegas for nine years and who authorities say is the leader of an organization called Nevada Lawmen Group for Public Awareness, appeared to be the most publicly active. Lindsey has failed to pay his income taxes or has filed false returns since 1999, Johnson said.

Although Schiff has been incarcerated in Terre Haute, Ind. for nearly three years, he still appears to have a following in the Las Vegas Valley. Schiff's East Sahara bookstore, which once sported a huge sign that read, "Why pay income taxes when no law says you have to?" is shuttered. But his older blogs relating to tax protests occasionally resurface on the Internet.

Photos on Schiff's Web site show Lindsey in Schiff's office displaying his FBI special agent badge.

Lindsey is a coordinator for an organization called "We the People," which, according to its Web site, was developed to become "the nationwide force that will institutionalize and organize citizen vigilance." One of the group's six primary missions is "to help people become better informed about how to confront unconstitutional and illegal behavior by those wielding power in government at all levels," the site says.

Lindsey might have been tapping into the organization's teachings Thursday when he first appeared in federal court. He repeatedly interrupted the judge to ask whether a citation against him existed. When he made little progress, he turned to Johnson and tried to get his attention, but he couldn't remember Johnson's name and was told to be quiet.

On Friday, all but Call tried to explain their constitutional rights to Leavitt, which led to some bizarre exchanges. Each spelled their name for the court, emphasizing which letters should be capitalized and which should be lower-case. They made sure the judge noted their middle names.

Davis, 54, told Leavitt, "I accept the charges for value," when asked to enter a plea.

"I don't know what that means," Leavitt responded. "It's a simple question, guilty or not guilty."

Leavitt ultimately entered a not guilty plea on behalf of Davis.

Davis, who resides in Idaho with his wife and 16-year-old son, told Leavitt the charges included in the indictment were "absurd."

Undercover agents approached Davis and Rice last year and presented to them stolen checks from Wachovia Bank. The agents told the men they needed assistance laundering money from the checks and the two men allegedly obliged. Between March 2008 and September 2008, agents wired about $585,000 to Davis and he returned $540,000, keeping the difference as payment for his service, according to the indictment. Rice served as Davis' associate, according to the government.

Rice is a rabbi and attorney for the Pembina Nation, a native American group that Johnson said is not recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. The 46-year-old lives in Seligman, Ariz.

Despite their opinions about the federal government and the court system, each defendant told Leavitt they would not miss a court appearance.

"If I'm going to do anything, I'm going to run at you," Rice said, giving Leavitt pause.

Rice's attorney quickly jumped in to say his client simply meant that he plans to aggressively defend himself during the trial.

Contact reporter Adrienne Packer at apacker@reviewjournal.com or 702-384-8710.

joeyforpresident

When I read this story on DrudgeReport.com, it identified one of the arrested guys as a retired FBI agent.

That, to me, was the icing on the cake. No wonder the feds busted them.

thinkliberty

Quote from: joeyforpresident on March 08, 2009, 01:02 PM NHFT
When I read this story on DrudgeReport.com, it identified one of the arrested guys as a retired FBI agent.

That, to me, was the icing on the cake. No wonder the feds busted them.

Do you find the government kidnapping people that have not hurt or threatened anyone to be some kind of cake?  And what part of caging people that have not paid an extortion fee do you find to be icing?

Do you actually support the feds when they "bust" people?

joeyforpresident


Will you please "think" before you write?

I read the story about the bust of the "Sovereign Movement" on Drudge.

I then read that one of those arrested was a "retired FBI agent."

To me, that is what sealed the  deal on these arrests, that there was a "retired FBI agent" in the mix.


It's a "duh" story. "Icing on the cake" isn't talking about the fact that they DID get arrested, it was that the story mentioned one of those arrested was a retired FBI guy.


That retired FBI agent was probably a snitch.

THAT is what I meant.


Try to "think" next time...

thinkliberty

Because a former FBI agent decided he no longer wanted work for the federal mafia and decides not to support the federal mafia with cash as well because they are evil is not a bad thing.

Do you actually "think" kidnapping people that have not hurt anyone is a good thing?


David

Quote from the Las Vegas Review Journa l"Undercover agents approached Davis and Rice last year and presented to them stolen checks from Wachovia Bank. The agents told the men they needed assistance laundering money from the checks and the two men allegedly obliged. Between March 2008 and September 2008, agents wired about $585,000 to Davis and he returned $540,000, keeping the difference as payment for his service, according to the indictment. Rice served as Davis' associate, according to the government."

Agent Provocateurs of the gov't.   ::)  They apparently couldn't indict him on anything else, so they entrapped him.  Pitiful little leaches. 

Scott Roth

Frivolous complaint my ass! :D  They've never proved anything by law...so they do everything unlawfully.  And this ignorant country just lets it happen.  Ain't paying...ain't gonna pay.  Period!