Monday, June 26, 2023

Chamber of Secrets: Lesson From The Tax Court: The Administrative Record Rule In Whistleblower Cases

I would like to fasten on someone from the older generation and say to him: 

‘I see that you have come to the last stage of human life; you are close upon your hundredth year, or even beyond: come now, hold an audit of your life. Reckon how much of your time has been taken up by a money-lender, how much by a mistress, a patron, a client, quarrelling with your wife, dashing about the city on your social obligations. Consider also the diseases which we have brought on ourselves, and the time too which has been unused. 
,SENECA, On the Shortness of Life: Life Is Long if You Know How to Use It

Audit success comes from service, not from status. Internal Auditors are the eyes and ears of management - be sure you are not deaf or blind. Trust is earned; but awarded only after careful verification.


Tolstoy the man could be farcical; never War and Peace. Howe again:

“Farce brings pleasure through humiliation--knock him down, throw him into the water, hit him again. And then, a sort of magical cancellation: Fatty Arbuckle gets up, blinking with good humor, and the world is restored.”

Be kind when others mirror kindness

Be more ruthless when other reflex ruthlessness 


Plutus Payroll tax scam's downfall captured in police phone taps and surveillance video


Lesson From The Tax Court: The Administrative Record Rule In Whistleblower Cases


Delve into the key issues threatening integrity across Australian parliaments. Read the paper: https://lnkd.in/gGe7AS9F The NSW Parliamentary Research Service was established over 30 years ago, and has been providing impartial research to members of Parliament and the people of NSW since.


Russia Says Wagner Group's Leader Will Move To Belarus After His Rebellious March Challenged Putin
In a televised speech to nation, Putin called the rebellion a “betrayal” and “treason.”


AFP, ATO raid Scale Facilitation HQ in North Geelong after alleged tax fraud

An international investment company’s North Geelong HQ was raided by federal police on Friday as part of an investigation into alleged tax fraud.


Infosys executive vice-president tells parliamentary committee he met with former Coalition minister 11 times





 Airline fined $15,625 after worker ‘ingested’ into engine at Montgomery airport AL.com


Death on the Job: Texas Says “NO” To Water Breaks in the Heat KKCN 



How Companies Are Tackling Job MiseryWSJ. More money?


Despite the PwC scandal, multinationals have fought off laws to boost tax transparency


Chamber of Secrets 

The Supreme Court’s habit of deciding hugely important cases without briefings, arguments, or even a word of explanation threatens democracy.

 Some progressive legal scholars have coined the term demosprudence to underline that the opinion announcements are the only time that the Court’s members directly address the public. 

Clearly, however, the justices do not want the public to see or hear their words. This particular Court does not conceive of itself as belonging to the people. Since Trump’s election in 2016, the Court has acquired four new justices; a new format for oral argument (formerly confined to one hour, oral argument now meanders to a conclusion when everybody runs out of steam); a new concept of precedent (previous cases are binding unless there’s something about them the new conservative majority just doesn’t like); and a new methodology for its constitutional jurisprudence (the “history and tradition”—or, more cynically, the “Look, I found something in Bracton’s De legibus et consuetudinibus Angliæ that agrees with me, case closed!”—test). 

Also consequential is an unannounced procedural change: The Court makes more and more important decisions through its so-called shadow docket, in which it grants or denies orders to decide, delay, or reverse lower-court decisions. These orders are often only one sentence long and announced in written form either on regular Court days or after hours. They often include no explanation of the Court’s reasoning and do not always record individual votes. 

Always available to the Court for genuine emergency cases (such as last-minute appeals from death row inmates), the shadow docket has become a major way in which the new Court shapes the law and steers the lower federal courts—almost uniformly in an extreme-right direction…”