[vent]
I'm trying to get ready to go out of state, and just a little intimidated by the AP process, so I decided to give these guys a call. My case seems pretty cut and dried (to me). I mean seriously, if I didn't think I had a sure bet, I wouldn't even be thinking about an AP. Litigation just isn't one of those things I feel one should take a crap shoot on. I have 18 pages of evidence, (including CMRRs) that the IRS received notice of my bk filing and tried to collect outside of bk ANYWAY.
So anyway, these guys are (sort of but not really) local to me, but they apparently do know my judge and my district and I was hoping they would handle my AP for me so I didn't have to mess with it. This is the response I got back from these guys after I told them everything, including dates and details.
"Successfully suing the IRS is exceptionally difficult. They usually fight to the bitter end. We are a small practice and rarely, if ever, sue governmental entities b/c the long battles become uneconomical. We cannot help you."
WIMPS.
Somehow I seriously doubt the IRS would put up much a fight for the very same "uneconomical" reason. And my proof is so undeniable, I think they would end up looking like idiots if they tried to argue it. What was that I read about a well argued petition?
And people wonder why people file pro se.
[/vent]
I'm trying to get ready to go out of state, and just a little intimidated by the AP process, so I decided to give these guys a call. My case seems pretty cut and dried (to me). I mean seriously, if I didn't think I had a sure bet, I wouldn't even be thinking about an AP. Litigation just isn't one of those things I feel one should take a crap shoot on. I have 18 pages of evidence, (including CMRRs) that the IRS received notice of my bk filing and tried to collect outside of bk ANYWAY.
So anyway, these guys are (sort of but not really) local to me, but they apparently do know my judge and my district and I was hoping they would handle my AP for me so I didn't have to mess with it. This is the response I got back from these guys after I told them everything, including dates and details.
"Successfully suing the IRS is exceptionally difficult. They usually fight to the bitter end. We are a small practice and rarely, if ever, sue governmental entities b/c the long battles become uneconomical. We cannot help you."
WIMPS.
Somehow I seriously doubt the IRS would put up much a fight for the very same "uneconomical" reason. And my proof is so undeniable, I think they would end up looking like idiots if they tried to argue it. What was that I read about a well argued petition?
And people wonder why people file pro se.
[/vent]
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