https://news.bitcoin.com/bitcoin-investor-sues-irs-unlawful-seizure-financial-records-crypto-exchanges/


Bitcoin Investor Sues IRS for Unlawful Seizure of Financial Records at 3 Crypto 
Exchanges
Bitcoin investor Jim Harper has sued the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS), 
its commissioner, and a number of federal agents. He alleged that they 
unlawfully seized his private financial information from three cryptocurrency 
exchanges.Bitcoin Investor vs. IRS
Bitcoin investor Jim Harper has filed a lawsuit against IRS Commissioner 
Charles P. Rettig, the IRS, and “John Doe IRS Agents 1-10.” The latter refers 
to “fictitious names for the person or persons who authorized and conducted the 
search” of his private financial records, according to the court document filed 
on July 15 with the District Court for the District of New Hampshire. A jury 
trial is demanded.

The document outlines three counts of violations. The first is a “violation of 
the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution” as “the defendants conducted an 
unlawful search and seizure” of the plaintiff’s private financial information. 
The second is a violation of the Fifth Amendment as “the defendants violated 
due process protections in seizing” the plaintiff’s private financial 
information. The third is a violation of 15 U.S.C. § 7609(f) as the defendants 
obtained the plaintiff’s “financial records through an unlawful John Doe 
subpoena.”

The complaint detailed that Harper opened an account with Coinbase in 2013. He 
stopped accumulating new bitcoin and began liquidating his investments at 
Coinbase and transferred his remaining holdings to a hardware wallet in 2015. 
By early 2016, he no longer had any bitcoin at Coinbase. From 2016, he 
liquidated his bitcoin through either Abra or Uphold exchanges. He claimed to 
have properly declared and paid all applicable taxes on his bitcoin gains.

The IRS filed the infamous ex parte “John Doe” administrative summons on 
Coinbase in 2016, seeking information on U.S. persons who conducted crypto 
transactions between Jan. 1, 2013, and Dec. 31, 2015. Coinbase protested and 
the IRS narrowed its demand, seeking instead information regarding accounts 
with at least the equivalent of $20,000 in crypto transactions in any one year 
during the above period. When the exchange refused to comply, the IRS 
petitioned to enforce the summons against Coinbase. According to Coinbase, this 
means information on 8.9 million transactions and 14,355 account holders.

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