Friday, April 3, 2015

Well That Makes Sense

A lawyer who worked in the IRS ethics office was disbarred Thursday by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, which concluded she misappropriated a client’s funds from a case she handled in private practice, broke a number of ethics rules and showed “reckless disregard for the truth” in misleading a disbarment panel looking into the matter.

The lawyer, Takisha Brown, reportedly had bragged that she would never be punished because her boss would protect her, but an IRS spokesman said Wednesday that she was no longer an employee at the agency.

Ms. Brown had her licenses suspended and then was disbarred after misusing money she won for a client in an automobile accident case. Under terms of the deal, Ms. Brown was to use part of the settlement to pay the victim’s medical bills, but the lawyer withdrew the money herself and ignored repeated requests from the client’s physicians to make good on the bills, the appeals court said.

Ms. Brown also misled a disbarment hearing panel when it began looking into the matter, the court said. ...

In a speech this week, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen insisted his agency has turned the corner on problems with employee behavior in recent years.
We've always "sort of" joked that the reason for Federal Government sexual harassment training was to teach us how to sexually harass and get away with it. Now we know what Federal Government ethics training is for. . .

The wonder is that she got fired left to spend more time with her family at all. I guess Koskinen didn't want to be distracted from his discussion on the 401 c4 scandal to discuss it the next time he's up on Capitol Hill.

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