Patrick S. Kennedy

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 2021
Docket5687-17
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Patrick S. Kennedy, (tax 2021).

Opinion

T.C. Memo. 2021-3

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

PATRICK S. KENNEDY, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 5687-17W. Filed January 12, 2021.

Patrick S. Kennedy, pro se.

Jadie T. Woods and Eric R. Skinner, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

COPELAND, Judge: In this case petitioner, Patrick Kennedy, has appealed

pursuant to section 7623(b)(4)1 three determinations of the Whistleblower Office

(WBO) of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that decline to make awards to him.

1 All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.

Served 01/12/21 -2-

[*2] Mr. Kennedy initially filed a single whistleblower claim with the WBO, but

as will be explained in further detail infra the WBO divided his single claim into

three distinct claims. For all three claims respondent has moved for summary

judgment under Rule 121 asserting that: (1) there is no genuine dispute of

material fact; (2) the WBO did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Kennedy’s

claims; and (3) respondent is entitled to summary adjudication. For the reasons

stated below we will grant summary judgment to respondent on all three claims.

Background

The following background is derived from the pleadings, the parties’ motion

papers, and the supporting exhibits attached thereto. We state the background

solely for purposes of ruling on the pending motion for summary judgment and not

as findings of facts. Mr. Kennedy was a resident of the State of Illinois when his

petition was filed.

I. Mr. Kennedy’s Submission to the WBO

On April 3, 2012, the WBO received Form 211, Application for Award for

Original Information. In that Form 211 Mr. Kennedy alleges that taxpayers 1, 2, -3-

[*3] 3,2 and related subsidiaries and affiliates of taxpayer 13 owe $150,103,245 in

unpaid excise taxes, penalties, and interest.

On April 20, 2012, respondent mailed a letter to Mr. Kennedy confirming

receipt of his Form 211 and assigning claim No. 2012-004308 to his claim.

Within the WBO, the claim was assigned to Program Analyst Katherine Onken.

On May 24, 2012, Ms. Onken hosted a conference call with a number of IRS

personnel to determine which IRS operating division would review the claim. The

participants to that conference call determined that the claim should be assigned to

the IRS Large Businesses & International (LB&I) operating division, particularly

the team responsible for entities in the communications, technology, and media

industries (LB&I CTM).

II. LB&I’s Consideration of Mr. Kennedy’s Claim

Thereafter, on June 1, 2012, Ms. Onken transmitted the claim file to LB&I

CTM. Attached to that claim file was a memorandum from Ms. Onken to the

2 Nonparty taxpayers are referred to in generic terms to protect their identities. See Rule 345(b). 3 Three facts are important to our decision in this case. First, the target taxpayers are all related to each other. Second, a predecessor entity to taxpayer 1 declared bankruptcy almost 10 years before the WBO received Mr. Kennedy’s Form 211. Third, in connection with that bankruptcy the IRS, in settlement of its proof of claim, received over $24 million. -4-

[*4] LB&I CTM director. The memorandum states that the WBO “has completed

an initial analysis of the claim and has determined that it appears to meet the

requirements to be processed as a claim under * * * [section 7623(b)].” Following

Ms. Onken’s transmission of the claim file to LB&I CTM, the claim went through

a taint review4 before being assigned to an LB&I CTM team for evaluation in

August 2012.

Between September 26, 2012, and October 1, 2012, LB&I CTM and the IRS

Tax Exempt and Government Entities operating division, particularly the

subdivision for Exempt Organizations (TEGE-EO), discussed that the claim

involved tax-exempt voluntary employees’ beneficiary association (VEBA) trusts,

and that LB&I CTM did not have anyone who could evaluate excise tax claims

involving a VEBA. The WBO was informed of this development.

III. Transferring Mr. Kennedy’s Claim to TEGE-EO

As a result of LB&I CTM’s reevaluation, on or about October 2, 2012, Ms.

Onken hosted another conference call to discuss the transfer of Mr. Kennedy’s

claim from LB&I CTM to TEGE-EO. Originally, the parties to the first

conference call decided to assign the case to LB&I because taxpayer 1 fell under

4 A taint review refers to a review of the claim file for “information that was illegally obtained by the whistleblower, or subject to a valid claim of privilege.” Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) pt. 25.2.1.4.3(3) (Jan. 11, 2018). -5-

[*5] its jurisdiction. However, after the LB&I CTM team reviewed the

allegations, they concluded that the claim would be better suited with TEGE-EO

since the issues were interrelated and involved tax-exempt entities. During this

second conference call TEGE-EO pointed out an issue with the claim; namely, that

TEGE-EO “cannot work on returns that are not EO returns and has a concern

because the [claim] number is currently assigned to a Form 1120 [U.S.

Corporation Income Tax Return].” To resolve this issue, Ms. Onken agreed to

separate the tax-exempt entities from the for-profit entity by assigning a different

claim number to each entity.

Accordingly, taxpayer 2 was assigned No. 2013-001106, taxpayer 3 was

assigned claim No. 2013-001107, and taxpayer 1 became the only entity that was

assigned to claim No. 2012-004308. Taxpayers 2 and 3 were assigned to TEGE-

EO (claims), while taxpayer 1 was placed in suspense. To accomplish this

reassignment, the LB&I CTM team filled out Form 11369, Confidential

Evaluation Report on Claim for Award. That Form 11369 is largely blank save for

page 3, which transfers the claim to TEGE-EO because “[t]he issues identified in

the claim are not related to income tax.” Because of this transfer and Ms. Onken’s

pending retirement from the IRS, the WBO program analyst assigned to supervise

the claims changed from Ms. Onken to Miriam Massey. -6-

[*6] IV. TEGE-EO’s Consideration of Mr. Kennedy’s Claims

At TEGE-EO the claims were subjected to additional taint reviews. After

the taint reviews for both claims were completed, the claims were sent to a

classifier with TEGE-EO classifications. Initially, both claims were considered

for examination; but because taxpayer 2 was a tax-exempt entity that had been

terminated since December 1999 with its last return filed in 1994, TEGE-EO

determined not to examine taxpayer 2. Only the claim against taxpayer 3 was

selected for examination, and no further action was to be taken with respect to the

claim against taxpayer 2.

The claim against taxpayer 3 was assigned to Revenue Agent Collette

Dominick in a TEGE-EO group for examination. She received the assignment on

May 1, 2013, and examined taxpayer 3’s return until June 22, 2015. While she

was examining the return, the WBO analyst assigned to supervise the claims

changed from Ms. Massey to Senior Program Management Analyst Steven Mitzel.

On or about January 16, 2015, Ms. Dominick advised Mr. Mitzel that she

was ready to close the claims, and Mr. Mitzel directed her to send him the Forms

11369 and the case records. After reviewing the documentation, Mr.

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