Wednesday Tax Day Potpourri

| April 15, 2026 | 16 Comments

Sample Hezbollah confiscated weapons

The Bint Jbail hospital in Gaza is symbolic to Hezbollah – it’s where then-secretary general Hassan Nasrallah described Israel as “weaker than a spider web.” Since September 2024, courtesy of those web-spinners, he has not been around to confirm that. They tagged him in an airstrike on Beirut.

Seems Israeli troops in the vicinity of the hospital drew fire – from the hospital.

The soldiers, operating under the military’s 98th Division, identified terrorists who opened fire at IDF soldiers from hospital windows. The military killed an unspecified number of the terrorists operating within the hospital, as well as approximately 20 additional terrorists operating in the vicinity, the military stated.

Nothing characterizes a religion of peace by violating international law  by running combat from a hospital.

The hospital complex was used to transfer and store weapons, while terrorists used the facilities as observation posts, hiding places, and sheltered locations, the military added.

This comes amid reports in Israeli media that the IDF is besieging the town of Bint Jbail, which is one of the largest population centers on the Lebanese side of the border. Jerusalem Post

Next up, Jason Butler of Jupiter, FL gets an all-expenses vacation at our expense.

A 38-year-old Jupiter, Florida man is going to federal prison after pulling off one of the more brazen military fraud schemes in recent memory: he billed the U.S. Navy for fuel it never received, using forged documents, fabricated wire transfers, and at one point, an entirely made-up identity. The scheme ran for nearly a year and a half, and by the time it was over, Jasen Butler had pocketed more than $4.5 million in stolen military funds.

What Butler spent that stolen money on is now also gone: the judge ordered the forfeiture of multiple high-value properties in Florida and Colorado that Butler had purchased with the illicit proceeds.

The judge gave him five years.

Between August 2022 and January 2024, U.S. Navy warships operating in international ports needed to purchase fuel, and Butler’s company swooped in with bids and paperwork, none of which were legitimate.

He submitted dozens of falsified documents including tampered invoices, fraudulent wire transfer memos, and forged contracts, all designed to look like real fuel transactions.

When investigators began closing in and scrutiny of his company intensified, Butler did not stop. He simply changed his approach. He hid his identity and began representing himself as an employee of a fuel division at another company, except that division did not exist. He had invented it. The scheme continued until authorities finally caught up with him and the full scope of the fraud was exposed.  Guessing Headlights

Me, I’m thinking that whoever approved payment needs some serious examination, too. A year per million bucks sounds kinda light, doesn’t it?

Remember the Noem-mobiles?

The case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia is still ongoing and may get more interesting.   Todd Blanche is getting ready to take over Pam Bondi’s chair.

Blanche’s public statements about human smuggling charges brought against Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who the US wrongly deported to a mega-prison in El Salvador, have for months frustrated prosecutors’ ability to bring the case to trial as Abrego Garcia has asserted that he’s being vindictively targeted.

A judge is poised to decide at any time whether to use those comments to dismiss the charges. But if doesn’t toss out the charges, he could decide to summon Blanche to his courtroom in Nashville, Tennessee, to answer questions under oath about the department’s motivation for criminally pursuing Abrego Garcia.

“The judge’s determination as to the truthfulness of Blanche’s statements takes on extra importance now that Blanche is the acting attorney general and, potentially, a candidate for the permanent job,” said Elie Honig, a CNN senior legal analyst and former federal prosecutor.

“If the judge finds that Blanche’s statements support a finding of vindictive prosecution, that’ll be a black eye for Blanche, and for DOJ, and will impact his credibility,” Honig added.

The day officials announced Abrego Garcia’s return, Blanche told Fox News that the Justice Department started probing Abrego Garcia after a judge in Maryland both concluded that the administration “had no right to deport him” and accused officials “of doing something wrong” in its approach to him. CNN

Obviously this one ain’t over.

Category: "Your Tax Dollars At Work", Crime, Israel, Navy

guest

16 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Tallywhagger

I guess that IRS is not real interested in this sort of thing or the muslim allied health service organizations in California and Minnesota… and everywhere else where enclaves of islam congregate.

Just imagine if IRS paid bounty to cold blooded auditors?

Odie

Local talk radio had an article on folks not planning on filing or paying their taxes this year out of protest for the goings on surrounding Iran among other things. Mostly Iran, but also ice and their deportation processes. It will be fun to watch their brave face change on TV when the irs tells them homey don’t play that game.

Tallywhagger

If they don’t file IRS will file for them. If they don’t pay IRS will garnish payroll, seize bank accounts, publish notice of lien to encumber property and if someone has a little money IRS will issue a levy order and take what they can.

Of course, not everyone is subject to the same rules, i.e., Al Sharpton, Hunter Biden, any of the cash money laundering ops in Minneapolis and millions of hispanic culture claiming refundable tax credits … and all living at the same address!

A Proud Infidel®™

I’ve heard that it’s safer to owe money to the Mob than the IRS.

Not a Lawyer

The agency I work at receives, on average, three scam invoices per day. This works out to about 1000 per year.

I’m old enough to remember the “toner bandits” back in the day who would send bogus invoices for toner supplies. We are way past that now. Some are hard copies, some are email some are both; sometimes they follow up with a phone call. Sometimes they call with spoofed number from a real company. Many include threatening language of past due balances. Stuff said to have been delivered includes office supplies, training, IT services pretty much anything you can think of.

There is so much of it that a lot of mail goes straight into the trash or the Email recycle bin; especially if it is stamped “past due invoice” or something similar. Electronically there are a number of ways to screen things out these days. Sometimes we read the invoices for laughs. So long as they can steal a dollar without actually doing anything of value, they will keep at it forever. Some people are just broken inside.

26Limabeans

I got a real fancy looking envelope in the mail today.
Had the fold and “tear off” strips on both ends and open
this end first BS etc.
Supposedly I was authorized a special refund of over twenty
dollars and blah,blah, blah from my power company.
It went into the shredder without me even opening it.

Veritas Omnia Vincit

Our business as well, we also get scammers every day looking to “offer us special financing”…plus the fake invoices, etc…

The easy part for us is when we ask them for their preferred vendor number….we have a list, a very short list of vendor/partners and we don’t do business with randos ever. As a manufacturer of a variety of printed packaging, and almost every other printed materials one could need we single source entire departments. It keeps the vendor list small and it makes problem resolution easy. If all the parts and materials come from a single vendor they really can’t point the finger at anyone else. And we buy enough material that it keeps our vendors motivated to solve problems quickly.

Hack Stone

We are still awaiting your remittance for payment on the Y3K software that we shipped you on April 1. If payment is not made by COB this Friday, we will have to turn your account over to our debt collectors, and they are tenacious. They are still pursuing payment for all of you who still owe the Columbia House Record & Tape Club.

jem3

Mr. Stone, our accounts receivable clerk MS Helen Waite is looking into your claim. For further information please go to Helen Waite!

Hack Stone

Hack Stone has gone to Helen Waite, and she told him that he needs to speak to a Hugh Jazz.

A Proud Infidel®™

I still owe $14.98 on my Montgomery Ward credit card, do I need to worry?

Amateur Historian

Unrelated: California is truly ran by criminals, for criminals. They introduced a bill dubbed the “Stop Nick Shirley” Act which is a blatant violation of Freedom of the Press!

https://ad75.asmrc.org/2026/04/13/ca-democrats-advance-stop-nick-shirley-act-to-criminalize-investigative-journalism/

Amateur Historian

Passing a law to protect crime??? Now I’ve seen everything!

SFC D

It’s California. Go figure.

Hack Stone

Are they going to retroactively enforce this law and perp walk the producers of 60 Minutes?

Really would love to see them try to enforce this unconstitutional law. It’s not just the Woke Left that has a bench of lawyers looking to get some national exposure by pissing off the other side.

A Proud Infidel®™

Liberalism is truly a mental disorder, liberals prove that every day with their words and deeds!