The 1985 IRS Memo on the 16th Amendment They Said to Destroy
1985 IRS document dated April 4, 1985, attributed to IRS Commissioner Roscoe L. Egger Jr., discussing a tax case where the 16th Amendment’s ratification was challenged.The document says refund requests from citizens aware of the issue should be handled “as quickly and quietly as possible,” with no written communications, and that the memo should be destroyed.
Why it matters:
It raises the question: what did the IRS know about the 16th Amendment, the income tax, and 1913 — and why would such a memo need to disappear?
This 1985 IRS document is dated April 4, 1985 and attributed to IRS Commissioner Roscoe L. Egger Jr.
It discusses a tax case where the defense challenged whether the 16th Amendment was properly ratified.
Then it says refund requests should be handled “as quickly and quietly as possible.”
No written communications.
Destroy the memo.
Now pair that with G. Edward Griffin’s The Creature from Jekyll Island — a 1.5M-view breakdown of the hidden history behind the Federal Reserve.
Because 1913 wasn’t just about taxes.
It was the year of the income tax and the Federal Reserve Act.
Taxation.
Central banking.
Debt money.
Control.
Maybe the real question is not just whether Americans were taxed lawfully.
Maybe the real question is:
What exactly happened to America in 1913?
Read the document.
Watch Griffin.
Follow the money.
https://irp.cdn-website.com/6b820530/files/uploaded/IRS-Letter%201985.pdf
The Creature From Jekyll Island (by G. Edward Griffin)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lu_VqX6J93k