Read Confessions of a Tax Collector Online
Authors: Richard Yancey
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #General
HarperCollinsPublishers
Confessions of A Tax Collector. Copyright © 2004 by Richard Yancey. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information, address HarperCollins Publishers Inc., 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022.
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FIRST EDITION
Designed by Laura Lindgren
Printed on acid-free paper
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.
ISBN 0-06-055560-2
04 05 06 07 08 /RRD 10 98765432 1
For the Revenue Officers
This book would not exist if not for the real people who occupy its pages. They were more than coworkers during my time with the Service. They were also my friends. I have struggled to portray them accurately and to the best of my recollection. Much time has passed since those days. Memory fades, but not the fondness I have for all of them. God bless and Godspeed.
I am extraordinarily fortunate to have Marjorie Braman, vice president and executive editor at HarperCollins, as my editor. Perceptive, empathetic, an enthusiastic lover of stories well told, she has been coach, cheerleader, and most avid fan throughout the entire process. All writers should be as lucky.
Brian DeFiore, my agent, advocate, and guide, championed the book. Always positive, but with stern pragmatism, he never hesitated in the early days of this project to take up my banner and recklessly charge up the hill.
I thank my three boys, who endured my mood swings and evening absences with grace, understanding, and patience. A father could not ask for better sons.
There are not enough words in the language to express my gratitude to my wife. I am convinced there is no one on the face of the planet with more courage, honesty, or unselfish devotion—particularly toward this most difficult of husbands. Brian charged up the hill, but she was ever the light on top of it, guiding me home.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1:
CHALLENGER
CHAPTER 2:
SHOOT THEM ALL
CHAPTER 3:
DANCE LESSONS
CHAPTER 4:
THE PRINCE OF POWER
CHAPTER 5:
DRAIN BAMAGED
CHAPTER 6:
BYZANTIUM
CHAPTER 7:
SOMETHING IN THE WATER
CHAPTER 8:
GINA’S CAT
CHAPTER 9:
LEVERAGE
CHAPTER 10:
IS IT SAFE?
CHAPTER 11:
WAR
CHAPTER 12:
VENGEANCE
CHAPTER 13:
DEMIGOD
CHAPTER 14:
ANNIE
No name in this book, with the exception of my own, belongs to anyone I know. I have changed the names of all other characters and have altered their personal appearances and histories. I have taken particular pains to protect the identities of those taxpayers with whom I dealt during my years of service, changing appearance, occupation, and, in some circumstances, gender.
I have also taken liberties with the arrangement of incidents, for clarity and to facilitate the narrative flow. I did not keep contemporaneous notes of my conversations with taxpayers, coworkers, or any other persons. I have relied on my own memory, such that it is, to reconstruct conversations. Throughout, however, I have striven to record the spirit of what was said, if not the actual words.
The Service is the largest civilian employer in the federal government. To claim that my experiences are common to all within it would not only be grossly inaccurate but monumentally unfair. This is the story of one employee among the thousands who serve.
JIM NEYLAND
, Grade 14 Branch Chief, Tampa Branch, Jacksonville District, Southeast Region
BETH,
Grade 12 Revenue Officer, Lakeside post-of-duty
GINA TATE
, Grade 13 Supervisory Revenue Officer (Group Manager), Lakeside post-of-duty
MELISSA CAVANAUGH
, Grade 12 Revenue Officer and On-the-Job Instructor, Lakeside post-of-duty
HENRY
, Grade 11 Revenue Officer, Lakeside post-of-duty Allison, Grade 7 Revenue Officer Trainee, Lakeside post-of-duty
RACHEL
, Grade 7 Revenue Officer Trainee, Lakeside post-of-duty Dee, Grade 7 Revenue Officer Trainee, Lakeside post-of-duty
CAROLINE
, Grade 7 Revenue Officer Trainee, Lakeside post-of-duty
TOBY PETERSON
, Grade 12 Revenue Officer and Union Steward, Lakeside post-of-duty
CINDY SANDIFER
, Grade 12 Revenue Officer and On-the-Job Instructor, Lakeside post-of-duty
BONNY
, Grade 5 Group Clerk, Lakeside post-of-duty
BRYON SAMUELS
, Grade 15 Collection Division Chief, Jacksonville District, Southeast Region
SAM MASON
, Grade 12 Revenue Officer and lead instructor, RO Basic Training, Tampa post-of-duty
LARRY SIMON
, Grade 12 Offer-in-Compromise Specialist and Basic Training Instructor, Panama City post-of-duty
WILLIAM CULPEPPER
, Grade 12 Revenue Officer and On-the-Job Instructor, Lakeside post-of-duty
JENNY DUNCAN
, Grade 13 Supervisory Revenue Officer (group manager) and Acting Branch Chief, Orlando Branch
HOWARD STEVENS
, Grade 13 Special Agent-in-Charge, Criminal Investigation Division, Tampa post-of-duty
BOB CAMPBELL
, Grade 14 Branch Chief, Orlando Branch, Jacksonville District, Southeast Region
FRED NEWBERRY
, Grade 12 Occupational Development Specialist, Jacksonville District
ANNIE DEFLORIO
, Grade 13 Supervisory Revenue Officer (group manager), Orlando and (later) Lakeside post-of-duty
The American Taxpayer
The President of the United States
The Secretary of the Treasury
The Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service
The Regional Directors
The District Directors
The Collection Division Chiefs
The Branch Chiefs
The Group Managers
The Revenue Officers
The American Taxpayer
Description of the Work
Internal Revenue Officers focus on the collection of delinquent taxes and functions directly related to that work. Cases, called taxpayer delinquent accounts (TDA) or taxpayer delinquent investigations (TDI) are assigned to a revenue officer for resolution…
Revenue officers have extensive face-to-face personal contacts with taxpayers, attorneys, accountants, and other representatives and spend a major portion of their time in fieldwork…
The Difficulty of the Work
Conditions affecting the difficulty and responsibility of revenue officer work include:
• pressure to resolve delinquent cases within deadlines;
• applying complex statutes, regulations, and judicial decisions to complicated situations;
• dealing with fearful, hostile, and defensive individuals and organizations;
• working in unstructured environments such as high crime areas; and
• dealing with prominent taxpayers or similar circumstances subject to news media coverage.
“You will learn there are things you may say and things you may not say, and it is those things you may not say that are the essence of your work here.”
THE FIRST PROTOCOL:
Find where they are
THE SECOND PROTOCOL:
Track what they do
THE THIRD PROTOCOL:
Learn what they have
THE FOURTH PROTOCOL:
Execute what they fear
Some years ago—never mind how long precisely—having little or no money in my purse, and nothing particular to interest me on shore, I thought I would sail a little and see the watery part of the world.
—
Moby-Dick
For most of the past thirteen years, I have used a different name, chosen by me and approved by our government, to perform the task appointed to me by the people of the United States. This name, my professional name, I will not tell you.
I am a foot soldier in the most feared, hated, and maligned agency in the federal government.
I work for the Treasury. I execute Title 26 of the United States Code, for the Internal Revenue Service—or the Service, as we in the trenches call it.
I collect taxes, but don’t call me a tax collector. Nobody wants to be a tax collector. Call me what the Service calls me. Call me a revenue officer.
And hear my confession.
NOVEMBER 1990
“Okay, Rick, let’s start. Why do you want to be a revenue officer?”
I was sitting in a small conference room in Tampa, across the table from Jim Neyland, chief of the Tampa branch of the Jacksonville District of the Internal Revenue Service. It was after-hours. His tie was loose around his neck and his shirtsleeves rolled to his elbows. He was about fifty, with thinning salt-and-pepper hair and a bushy black mustache. I had just turned twenty-eight, and was wearing a ten-year-old suit with a ten-day-old dark blue tie. The interview had been scheduled to begin an hour earlier, but I had waited in the reception area of the branch office, while his secretary fussed at her desk and his loud voice boomed throughout the office as he made dinner arrangements on the phone. There were no magazines to read, no television to stare blankly at while I waited. In one corner sat a dusty plastic palm tree. The carpeting was dark blue. The divider separating the secretary’s workstation from the waiting area was white. The ceiling was white. On the white wall directly opposite me were two large framed photographs, one of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge and another of the space shuttle
Challenger.
The bridge had collapsed into Tampa Bay in 1980, killing thirty-five people.
Challenger
had exploded in 1986, seconds after the photograph was taken.
Jim Neyland did not want Chinese. He wanted barbecue. He had been thinking about it all day, and his heart was set on barbecue. He hated Chinese; he was always hungry again thirty minutes later. He wanted some barbecue pork and some beans and corn on the cob and some coleslaw and he didn’t give a good goddamn what everybody else wanted. No, not Italian, either. There would be no compromise where he was concerned. It was barbecue or nothing. The secretary flashed an apologetic smile in my direction and buzzed him again. “Mr. Yancey is here for his interview.” He apparently didn’t hear her.