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The rogue government of Los Angeles

posted at 3:03 pm on July 10, 2009 by Ed Morrissey
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The hinge of American citizenship is the rule of law.  We expect citizens to abide by it, and even more, we expect our governments to abide by it as well.  Governments that rule by whim and ignore the law become tyrannies or “banana republics:, as the owners of Creators Syndicate discovered in their dealings with the city of Los Angeles.  The city ignored its own ruling on a tax issue and demanded back taxes that the company does not owe to them:

From the beginning, we’ve been headquartered in Los Angeles. But 15 years ago we had a dispute with the city over our business tax classification. The city argued that we should be in an “occupations and professions” classification that has an extremely high tax rate, while we fought for a “wholesale and retail” classification with a much lower rate. The city forced us to invest a small fortune in legal fees over two years, but we felt it was worth it in order to establish the correct classification once and for all.

After enduring a series of bureaucratic hearings, we anxiously awaited a ruling to find out what our tax rate would be. Everything was at stake. We had already decided that if we lost, we would move.

You can imagine how relieved we were on July 1, 1994, when the ruling was issued. We won, and firmly planted our roots in the City of Angels and proceeded to build our business.

Everything was fine until the city started running out of money in 2007. Suddenly, the city announced that it was going to ignore its own ruling and reclassify us in the higher tax category. Even more incredible is the fact that the new classification was to be imposed retroactively to 2004 with interest and penalties. No explanation was given for the new classification, or for the city’s decision to ignore its 1994 ruling.

Their official position is that the city is not bound by past rulings — only taxpayers are. This is why we have been forced to file a lawsuit. We will let the courts decide whether it is legal for adverse rulings to apply only to taxpayers and not to the city.

First, one has to wonder why a city that specializes in entertainment — which Creators Syndicate distributes — would choose to impose penalizing taxes on distributors.  Clearly, a media syndicate sells content at either wholesale or retail to other businesses.  They don’t create the content; they sell it, either directly or indirectly, to the public.  Even if it didn’t, though, how does LA justify a significantly higher tax rate to the actual producers of content?  They hardly impact city services, certainly not as much as manufacturing.

However, that’s a matter of public policy and open for debate, while this case has deeper implications.  The decision of LA to ignore its own ruling and penalize CS forrelying on the city’s own decision (through the retroactive application) defies explanation.  That is not the act of a representative government that abides by the law; that is the action of tyrannical bureaucrats deciding that they are the law.  That’s dangerous regardless of whom the city victimizes in any specific case.  It demonstrates a lack of checks and balances, and a mentality that reduces Los Angeles residents to the status of subjects rather than citizens.

Rick Newcombe will leave Los Angeles as a result of this, and no one can blame him or anyone else who leaves a city intent on turning itself into a “banana republic,” as Newcombe accurately observes.   (via Michelle)


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Comment pages: 1 2

Los Angeles is officially part of mexico.

jukin on July 10, 2009 at 4:53 PM

When a government starts with the proposition that federal immigration law can be flouted without consequences, it’s no stretch to decide that other laws can also be ignored when they’re inconvenient. The Sanctuary City attitude is coming him to roost.

Cicero43 on July 10, 2009 at 4:56 PM

Move to SC or GA…but leave the liberal voters there. Hire new, red-blooded workers!

SouthernGent on July 10, 2009 at 4:58 PM

Even in beautiful coastal southern CA, it’s getting tough to stay, but why would anyone live in or near LA?

califdreamnred on July 10, 2009 at 5:09 PM

L.A. severely under reporting crime :

LAPD’s public database omits nearly 40% of this year’s crimes. By Ben Welsh and Doug Smith
July 9, 2009
The Los Angeles Police Department’s online crime map intended for public use has failed to include nearly 40% of serious crimes reported in the city, a Times analysis has found.

The omissions, which date back at least six months, include thousands of crimes known to LAPD officials and are included in their official crime statistics.

JiangxiDad on July 10, 2009 at 5:09 PM

“I have no pity for the people of LA or Calf. or any state that has for years elected these Libs. over and over.Just look at Mich. that state has been in down turn for years yet ever 2 or 4 years they send the same old libs to mayors office the state house and to D.C..You would think they would learn from there past vote but no they do the same damm thing.So to all the people of L.A. and ever other Dem. strong hold live with it or change it.

I agree except that I’ve been voting conservative here in LA for 25 years, so please pity some of us. I can’t leave, it really does have some great stuff: The city is surrounded by beautiful ocean, mountains and wilderness of everything from forest to desert, with an unbeatable climate, and cultural richness. The only problem is corrupt liberal stupid government.

bagoh20 on July 10, 2009 at 5:11 PM

I’m just going to go out on a limb and guess that “Creators Syndicate” has given lots of money to politicians — most if not all of them democrats. I hardly think it is a bastion of conservative free market thinking. I wonder how many “BusHitler” jokes this guy laughed at over a glass of chardonnay with the small-minded, intellectually vacuous Hollywood elite — at an Obama fundraiser, no doubt. So, you know, screw ‘em. Typical Hollywood limousine liberals. “Waaaaaa, we want all those other guys to pay the high taxes, not us. We’re speeeeeecial.” You reep what you sow, lefties. You’ve been told that the banana republic will eventually come for you. You refuse to believe it. So suck it, losers. High taxes are patriotic, remember?

Rational Thought on July 10, 2009 at 5:11 PM

Ummm, Ed? Isn’t it impossible to apply ANY change in law ex-post facto?

While your points are all valid, I feel this very important point was missed (or not sufficiently emphasized). You can’t just retroactively collect taxes and fees that were never levied if you increase the tax or change a company’s categorization in a later year.

Otherwise nothing is to stop someone from re-instituting Smoot-Hawley and charging every other nation back-tariffs.

BKennedy on July 10, 2009 at 5:13 PM

Being a Texan, I strongly support and welcome the Creators Syndicate to look into moving here. No state Income Tax and a low Sales Tax.

Dopavash on July 10, 2009 at 5:25 PM

Newcombe was just on Sean Hannity’s show. He named the bureaucrat who came down on him with this ridiculous ruling, and he said when his layers asked another city bureaucrat whether he thought it was right for the city to renege on a tax ruling it made 15 years ago, the guy just laughed and said “of course it is not right, but that’s government.” Newcombe also said the city has already turned his unpaid tax balance over to a collection agency, which has damaged his company’s credit. He cited two other large companies that have left LA recently after getting hit with similar tax bills.

Hannity is going to try to get to the Mayor on Newcombe’s behalf. That should be interesting.

rockmom on July 10, 2009 at 5:32 PM

After the revolution, I’m thinking of moving to CA. Lots of great weather and beauty.

JiangxiDad on July 10, 2009 at 5:43 PM

Hannity is going to try to get to the Mayor on Newcombe’s behalf. That should be interesting.

L.A. Mayor Antonio VivaLaRaza is too busy chasing skirts and doling out tax-funded resources to illegal aliens to have time for Hannity’s TV show.

Cicero43 on July 10, 2009 at 5:57 PM

Why shouldn’t LA do this? The federal government has been doing it all year and getting away with it.

burt on July 10, 2009 at 6:21 PM

I was born and raised in Los Angeles.

When I was a child, after a good nights sleep and rising early in the morning, on a cloudless day or a day with few clouds I could look out my bedroom window towards the mountains and see the white snow capped peaks of Big Bear and Mt. Baldy. Surrounding the peaks was a deep blue sky, and a warm yellow sun was rising behind the mountains. It is on of my favorite childhood memories. I imagined that heaven must be very similar.

By the time I was a tween, smog had all but erased the view of the mountains and the deep blue sky. Los Angeles had also become the primary destination of Asian migrants in the 70’s and Hispanic illegal immigrants throughout the 70’s and ever since. Black gangs had all but taken over Los Angeles City and the surrounding suburbs. We had moved further and further away from Los Angeles until my parents finally settled on a suburb far from L.A. City proper but still in L.A. County right on the border of Orange County. My parents still live there today.

As I aged beyond the tween’s and into my teens I watched while the population of L.A. County swelled enormously and L.A. slowly but surely degenerated into a cess pit of gangs and horribly run cities that allowed themselvs to complete waste away into ghetto’s and nothing more than clumps of dirt with houses. Much like a cancer, it spread further and further out into the suburbs. It is no surprise that the cities and ‘burbs that began to truly waste away with unmitigated haste were the cities where the minority populations took hold, took over, and finally elected their own as the city leaders.

It may sound racist, and I concede that it does, but the way it ’sounds’ in no way, shape, or form negates the fact that it is 100% truth when I say these things. L.A. City itself followed by the cities and suburbs surrounding L.A. City completely fell apart and surrendered to gangs and minority enclaves when the minorities took the cities for their own and basically evicted everyone out via crimes and harrassment and predation until every decent human being, no matter their race or heritage, fled to greener and safer pastures.

After many years, the cities and suburbs of L.A. have pretty much cemented their ‘ownership’. In Mexican neighborhoods, don’t you dare go into them unless you are Mexican. You will be attacked. In Black neighborhoods, don’t you dare venture into them unless you are black. You will be attacked. In the Asian neighborhoods, well, you can go into them and do business in their stores but don’t try living there. You will become a pariah and be made to feel so unwelcome they may as well have attacked.

I know these things to be fact. I was born and raised there my entire life until I had finally had enough and left, never to return, except to visit my parents and a few other relatives who managed to buy in to more expensive neighborhoods and are relatively safe and welcome. My brothers and sisters all moved out of state except one. He moved to a relatively safe area of Orange County. Most of my relatives fled Los Angeles as well.

L.A. is a complete cess pit. It once was a beautiful city. It is such a shame.

SilverStar830 on July 10, 2009 at 6:33 PM

Tyranny … it’s here.

HondaV65 on July 10, 2009 at 6:34 PM

Tyranny, it’s the new patriotism.

Mojave Mark on July 10, 2009 at 6:36 PM

I have no sympathy for anyone living in LA, they have been voting for goons for over two decades, the voters reap what they sow. The city is a horrible race baiting society that refuses to protect its citizens, and gives shelter to criminals. They asked for it, they got it.

San Francisco is starting to experience the same problems, and it will be the same cess pit that LA has become.

Rode Werk on July 10, 2009 at 6:44 PM

It’s not just California. A year or two ago, both the company I work for, which has field employees in Pennsylvania, and me personally, who used to live in Pennsylvania, were contacted by the PA Dept of Revenue and told we had back debts. The stories were so remarkably similar that it cannot be coincedence. The debts were the result of miniscule loopholes for which there was no documentation other than the Dept’s own records. In both cases, my company and I were told that we had no recourse of appeal because the statute of limitations had run out. However, if we didn’t pay, we’d be referred to a collection agency. My debt actually was referred, since I took the time to question what was being claimed before ponying up- silly me.

In both cases, when we complained, we were told about a labyrinthine procedure by which we could dispute the back-taxes claims. For me, it involved working with a “tax advocate” and digging up a lot of obscure paperwork. For my company, they needed to hire a tax lawyer to file a lawsuit. Unsurprisingly, both I as an individual and my company elected to just pay the amounts they claimed we owed (with interest and penalties) than to go through legal hell to fight it.

Our tax system is a criminal shakedown enterprise, no two ways about it. When profits are good, they try to keep the masses happy by only mostly bilking us. When the squeeze is on, their true instincts come out.

evergreen on July 10, 2009 at 6:49 PM

“…………As ye sow, so shall ye reap”……….

StimulateTHIS on July 10, 2009 at 7:56 PM

SilverStar830 on July 10, 2009 at 6:33 PM

I also grew up in the suburbs of L.A. and have seen a once prosperous and pleasant middle-class area degenerate into a cesspool of crime and gangs due to liberal government and illegal immigration. L.A. has been a lost cause for years. Mayor Antonio Viva-la-Reconquista and his lapdog Police Chief Bratton make their own rules. L.A. City government hasn’t been this corrupt since the 1930s, it’s 100% beholden to the illegals and minority special interests.

infidel4life on July 10, 2009 at 9:43 PM

Watching California and some of the other cyanotic-blue states dying of their false virtues is one of the pleasures sustaining me through this economic crisis. Carry on, carrion!

Kralizec on July 10, 2009 at 9:45 PM

City States?

Now how many of us here have been throwing out that “cannard” for the last three or four years? We haven’t a clue what we are talking about. Detroit, Chicago, L.A., ‘Frisco’(bite me San Francisco), Denver, Atlanta.
It used to be that the rural areas were the know-nothings. Now it includes the burbs too. They aren’t Banana Republics, they are Gutter Republics.

Limerick on July 10, 2009 at 11:40 PM

Yeah, I know, canard. Get over it.

Limerick on July 10, 2009 at 11:41 PM

I live about a half mile from the headquarters of the most notorious street gang in L.A. I ride my bike through their “turf” all the time. I’ve never had the slightest problem or felt the slightest fear. L.A. is a great city filled with great people. If you fear living amongst people who don’t look like you or talk like you, the feel free to move to deep Orange County, or any other robo-gated community in America. Good riddance! Enjoy your big screen TVs and your Walmart specials and your Cheesecake Factory nights on the town. Buh-bye!

pm123 on July 11, 2009 at 1:05 AM

Rest easy guys, L.A. has no problems and gang banging is awesome because pm123 has managed to ride his bike through the turf of gangs without incident.

Silverstar, call your family and tell them to move back, pms says its safe.

Hey pms, most Americans enjoy living in clean communities filled with polite, law abiding people, rather than gang bangers and conditions resembling third world countries which describes large swathes of Los Angeles. Just because you prefer the ghetto, doesn’t mean there is anything wrong with those Americans that don’t. And just because one prefers that, does not make them a xenophobe.

Take your narrow little mind back to Kos.

full circle on July 11, 2009 at 3:12 AM

Sad, but not surprising, when you realize this is just another case of what happens when Democrats control things. They don’t rule by law, but by greed and corruption….

DL13 on July 11, 2009 at 9:10 AM

Los Angeles is officially part of mexico.
jukin on July 10, 2009 at 4:53 PM

That is the truth. Yesterday I was traveling cross state and it struck me for the first time that we made the invasion easy.

We were driving from Monterey to pick up our kid at Stanford to bring him home to the Central Valley. Here is a partial list of the towns or cities we passed through.

Santa Cruz
San Jose
Palo Alto
Los Gatos
San Martin
Los Banos
Dos Palos
Merced
Madera
Fresno

No wonder Mexican immigrants feel so welcome. Our cities are named in their native language.

FireBlogger on July 11, 2009 at 10:12 AM

pm123 on July 11, 2009 at 1:05 AM

pm123 paints an unlikely scenario. You ride your bike long enough in parts of Los Angeles and you end up a short headline on the Homicide Blog.

FireBlogger on July 11, 2009 at 10:25 AM

When you have an area of great natural beauty, climate and potential, then give it over to liberals to experiment with, LA is the end product. It’s a damned shame and not likely to ever recover because the seeds of recovery cannot germinate in soil salted by gangs and illegal immigrants. They are both protected classes in California now.

SKYFOX on July 11, 2009 at 12:55 PM

Their official position is that the city is not bound by past rulings — only taxpayers are

What that actually means, in effect, is that the city is not bound by any of it’s rulings,, ever,,, only taxpayers are. How can it be read any other way?? Every ruling, once made, is technically a past ruling.
Yeah,, this is why revolutions start. Government saying it is basically,,, god. It can do what it wants, when it wants and the people will do what it wants them to do when it wants them to do it. In other words,, this is the antithesis of what our nation was to be,,, not a people subjected to the whims of a tyrannical government,, but a government for and by the people, a government subjected to the people.

JellyToast on July 11, 2009 at 1:26 PM

The funniest part is that while they will take your money and will demand more and more and expect that you will comply without protest (and you will), millions of illegals are permitted to flood over the border and are reaping all of the benefits without politicians having any regard for the pressures that it has put on the system. Healthcare, schools, criminal justice.

I won’t even get into the immigration debate here but we just cant afford an endless flood of humanity and expect a finite (and shrinking tax base) to support it all.

oped01 on July 11, 2009 at 2:34 PM

Tyranny.

BadgerHawk on July 11, 2009 at 6:07 PM

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