Helping the IRS Go After Felons in the NFL Might Bring You a $$$ Reward
There are many ways to change a bad system. Most people recognize that following the money and going after the money is the most effective way to convince a group to change their ways. Your average person typically does not have the financial means to go after a large corporation or a celebrity worth millions of dollars. However, depending on the type of illegal activity, the IRS can level that playing field and might offer you a reward based on the percentage they seize.
The IRS has issued a bulletin to help identify just how much might be awarded to a person if they can provide evidence that helps the IRS win a tax battle against a suspect. The bulletin is titled Claims Submitted to the IRS Whistleblower Office Under Section 7623, and they even have an official form for you to use to submit your claim, Its called Form 211 (see PDF) and I have used it myself many times in the past.
Update – Just for the record, I used this to turn in people working for organized crime in China where they were producing large quantities of consumer electronics that were being used to create IED’s in Iraq. Weirdly, I’ve gotten several emails from people that think that turning in people that don’t pay their fair share of taxes (like the chinese mafia or dog fighting ring leaders) is a bad thing.
Just so those of you that think this is a bad thing understand, if you want to support the Chinese mafia or dog fighters, I’d just as soon not have you subscribe anyway. It will actually make me feel better if you unsubscribe.Income tax evaders and money launderers suck!
On a similar note, for those of you that think ‘we’ should do something more important with our time, consider that this was something very important with my time that I am involved with in addition to this campaign.
Here’s how it works:
- Let’s say that you have information about how much money someone received illegally, possibly through illegal gambling for example, or you know how much money someone spent on illegal gambling activities that they wrote off as a different type of expense,
- You could share that information with the IRS providing the evidence that you have using Form 211
- If the total back taxes, plus penalties and interest (and the IRS charges massive penalties and interest so this can add up quickly) totals up over $2,000,000
- You may be eligible for a reward of up to 10%.
- If the amount is less than $2 million the percentage amount of the award is pretty much at the discretion of the IRS
- But more importantly, the IRS now has the information to go after a person that has essentially cheated on their taxes, cheated other taxpayers and with your information they can get that lost tax money back
- They might even be able to prosecute the tax cheat for income tax evasion or money laundering.
This type of tactic has been used for decades by prosecutors, who have successfully bankrupted and often times put in jail people including Al Capone to the KKK to organized criminals.
Protesters are just starting to realize that the information and facts they gain through their own research and investigation and sometimes freedom of information act evidence, that they can then do some of the analysis on that information in total and tip off the IRS.
How the IRS can help remove Violent Felons from the NFL
Many people that engage in illegal activities of a violent nature that are also celebrities often times spend a lot of money to cover up their crimes. This is a crime also, but the spending of the money, leaves a trail, lets call it smoke.
If you can find bread crumbs from that trail, you can start to put together the big picture. From the smoke trail, you might be able to determine the size of the fire, even if you can figure out exactly what type of fire it is. Depending on how that money was spent, who was paid and more importantly how it was or more often WAS NOT reported to the IRS can be used by the IRS to prosecute for unpaid taxes.
In the NFL, a number of high profile athletes have gotten into a significant amount of serious trouble related to violence. If they participated in a cover up, if their team participated in a cover up, if the NFL participated in a cover up or if the Union participated in a cover up for or with that athlete, the money trail can be the key to unlocking the crime, but more importantly bringing down the corrupt members of the organization.
We can gather some of that information, we can provide it to the IRS through Form 211, and we can help the IRS take action. Essentially, this can make it too expensive and difficult for these groups to protect criminal actions and not pay their taxes. It can also put them in jail. Plus, this can open the door on investigations that have grown cold due to lack of cooperation or an unwillingness to proceed on the part of prosecutors or others because they have been bribed by members of the group.
Each tax prosecution, each claim collected by the IRS adds more evidence to the case for the NFL to denounce violent criminals and step aside from protecting violent criminals. The legal cost, the financial liability, the liability on the brand of the NFL and its teams, would be so high that they would have to take actions to end their support of violent criminals and set stiff penalties for members of the NFL and its teams, stating that if someone commits a violent crime, they are out for life.
Using Tax Prosecutions to Remove Current Violent Felons in the NFL
This tactic could even be used for existing violent felons in the NFL. In many of the high profile cases of people that have committed violent crimes in the NFL, there were a number of people involved, often times both an entourage as well as possibly people from the team that knew of the crimes or activities.
These people all have information about what happened. Some of them may have even suffered financially due to the crimes, or might be more likely to share information after the fact about the incident. Other criminals that had dealings with criminals in the NFL might also be willing to share information about how much money they might have lost gambling with NFL criminals for example. Identifying this money, the amount of this money, whether it was reported correctly or not, could all be very useful for the IRS in making a case against tax cheats who also happen to be violent felons.
Related Links on Helping IRS Go After NFL Felons
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- Fans Against Violent Felons in the NFL Roger Goodell's decision to allow Michael Vick & other violent convicted felons in the NFL demonstrates that Roger Goodell should himself be removed and no...
- What are the Best Ways to Protest The Philadelphia Eagles, Michael Vick & Other Violent Felons in the NFL? Since the NFL and especially the Philadelphia Eagles made the unfortunate decision to allow Michael Vick back into the NFL where he will likely play...



















You use this form a lot? It’s one thing to report a serious tax cheat, but didn’t anyone teach you that no one likes a tattletale! Are you seriously going to go Sherlock Holmes and try to find tax fraud on NFL players? Wow, this site might surpass the Onion as the most hilarious site on the Internet!
BTW, you may want to add to your IRS notes the MV is getting some money due to being a top 5 seller for Jerseys (despite Dick’s not carrying it).
Here’s the entire list from sales on NFLShop.com from the NFL’s first four months of the fiscal year.
1. Brett Favre, Vikings
2. Jay Cutler, Bears
3. Troy Polamalu, Steelers
4. MICHAEL VICK, EAGLES
5. Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers
6. Tony Romo, Cowboys
7. Mark Sanchez, Jets
8. Tom Brady, Patriots
9. Adrian Peterson, Vikings
10. Eli Manning, Giants
Hey Football Bob,
I doubt Michael Vick is stupid enough not to report his income from the NFL or NFL sales of gear.
This is more about the money Michael Vick may have received from cocaine and heroin dealers that came to visit his place, fight their dogs with his, bet illegally with him, paying him off with illegal drug money, etc.
Michael Vick was extremely stupid to continually year after year make the mistakes that he did, but I doubt he was stupid enough to try and pull a Wesley Snipes by not paying any taxes at all.
But when it comes to reporting illegal cash transactions in the form of payments or receipts, it could be very different and there could be a large number of people that were involved with Michael Vick over those 6 years of illegal gaming and dog fighting that have direct evidence of what he REALLY did happen, as he did so much business with gangsters and drug dealers with his dog fighting business, I suspect the odds are good that one of them may eventually need to flip against him when they get caught for their own crimes in the future.
As to the tattletale issue, that argument is for pansies and wimps. It takes a brave person to stand up and report someone that is breaking the law.
When I first learned of some of the things involved in tax evasion with a company I worked for (see update above), I did not suspect half the bad stuff that was really happening.
Tax evasion and money laundering go hand in hand and they usually are just the tax cover up for much more serious crimes.
I could have taken the attitude that you suggest and said nothing, not turned into a ‘tattletale’ or acted as a whistleblower, but you see I’m a lot tougher than that.
I served in the Army for a bunch of years, and everyone in my family history has served during just about every major war or battle our country has been in. I don’t say that from the perspective that war is glorious or any crap like that. Its not. I say that from the perspective that we do what we have to when there is a need.
People that sit back and let criminals walk all over them are cowards. If you are too much of a coward to be a ‘tattletale’ then odds are you are going to end up a victim of your own cowardice some day.
We have to take stands against things that are wrong in this world. That’s not always easy both from the perspective of what it can do to our personal finances or even our public perception, or maybe even our short term safety (I’ve faced down a lot of death threats.) But if you take no action, you can bet that those criminals are going to get stronger, do things that are even worse and eventually that cowardly karma will come back to bite you.
You might find that funny, hilarious or something else. That’s cool, you are entitled to your opinion and thanks to people that are not cowards, you have the right to express it openly and freely.
More power to you!
But you are not surrounded by cowards and feeble minded imbeciles. This site is a small example of the fact that there are people out there that won’t stand by and let other people walk all over us.
with budweiser sponsoring the eagles and michael vick, i was just wondering if they would also be willing to let spud mckenzie spend a weekend at vick’s house?
Still doing this? Did michael vick use to bully you as a kid or something? Because this is alot of wasted time on football player. Still you asking for NFL felons to be banned from the NFL is like asking for the end of world hunger or eliminate violence. Continue to have fun in La La Land.
Hey no problem tom. The pyramids weren’t built in a day and we didn’t evolve to walk upright nor talk very quickly either.
Tom, I hope since you have pronounced this a lot of wasted time, it means you will be moving on to other sites such as the Michael Vick Fan Club
its not really our purpose, but I think we have just about convinced tom to our way of thinking. If nothing else maybe this site is a guilty pleasure for him.
max, i am not a michael vick fan. So i do not know what i would be doing at a mike vick fan club.