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Senate Foreign Relations Committee investigates why the IRS granted Israel lobby organizations tax-exempt status - 1962-1964"I would appreciate information as to whether or not they have tax-exempt status, and if contributions to them are tax-deductible to the donors. In each case where an exemption has been granted I would like to have indicated the facts applicable to the specific organization that brought it under the statutory provisions for tax exemption. I would also like to know if the facts developed during the Foreign Relations Committee hearings with regard to each organization named are consistent with those presented by such organization in its application for tax-exempt status." Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair J.W. Fulbright DocumentsThe Senate Foreign Relations Committee chartered
an investigation
in 1961 aimed primarily to unearth—and properly regulate—the
activities of Israel lobbying organizations funneling hundreds of
millions in U.S. and foreign donations into relief and political
activities. During the course of the investigation and hearings, the
committee discovered the Jewish Agency for Israel, a registered foreign
agent, was improperly funneling millions into lobbying and public
relations campaigns for Israel. Jewish Agency "conduits" included the
American Zionist Council, its unincorporated lobbying division the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
and American Israel Public Affairs Committee founder Isaiah Kenen's
Near East Report, among
others. Getting the IRS to cooperate with the
investigation was no easy task. Committee Chair Senator J.W. Fulbright
had to obtain two separate executive orders from JFK in order to finally
obtain the cooperation of the IRS. Even this cooperation was limited,
and by order of IRS Commissioner Mortimer Caplin allowed only three
senate staff to review tax records, with the proviso that the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee not publicly disclose sensitive information
in the open hearings about Israel lobbying groups taking place in May
and August of 1963. Commissioner Caplin admitted that Israel lobbying
organizations—as a result of facts surfaced during the Senate
hearings—had engaged in many activities they had not disclosed to the IRS
during their applications for tax-exempt status and periodic IRS
reviews. For example in the Jewish Agency's 1952
application for tax exempt status, it failed to disclose that it was
registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (since 1938).
According to Caplin, none of the Jewish Agency's financial statements
disclosed "expenditures on behalf of a foreign principal." The IRS was
again bamboozled during a 1960 review ruling affirming the Jewish
Agency's exempt status when the organization again failed to disclose it
was a foreign agent. The Jewish Agency's New York branch in 1961
received $1.4 million ($11 million in 2015 dollars) from the Jewish
Agency, in "charitable contributions from all over the world." But
among 34
Jewish Agency publications circulated in America, only one properly disclosed it was the product of a
foreign agent, according to Caplin. Nevertheless, despite these deceptions and
cognizant of facts raised in the May 1963 Senate hearings, "the Service
held in a ruling dated July 26, 1963 that the American Section qualified
for exemption pursuant to the provisions of section 501(c)(3) of the
Code." The IRS claimed it was unware of any political activities
conducted the American Zionist Council or that it was receiving Jewish
Agency funds, some of which were transferred to Christian organizations
and a pro-Israel think tank. In fact, the IRS had no information of this
massive operation
more recent than 1952. Caplin also said the IRS granted the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency tax exempt status in 1939, but was not aware its ownership had
been transferred to a holding company of the Jewish Agency. Caplin did
not reflect on the Jewish Agency's subsidization of this key mass media outlet or
other issues raised in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings. In the end, the IRS stated that based on the
Jewish Agency's formal announcement in 1960 that it would bre reorganized and
expand its board of directors to include apportionments of U.S.
citizens, and other promised reforms, that the IRS was reaffirming the Jewish
Agency’s tax-exempt status. Mortimer Caplin left the IRS on July 10,
1964 without its "expanded exempt organizations audit program" ever
taking any apparent action on issues raised by the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. The Jewish Telegraphic Agency, one of the targets
of the Senate investigation, breathed a sigh of relief when Sheldon
Cohen then assumed the mantle of IRS Commissioner on January 25, 1965,
reporting "Sheldon S. Cohen, 37-year-old District of Columbia native,
who was nominated this week by President Johnson to be the new
Commissioner of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service, said today his two
'pet charities' are the local Jewish Social Service agency and the
Jewish Community Center." The American Zionist Council was ultimately
disbanded by a 1962
Foreign Agents Registration Act order issued by Robert F. Kennedy.
Just six weeks after the order, the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee (AIPAC) split off and incorporated as a separate organization. AIPAC did not disclose on its 1967 application for tax exempt status to
the IRS that it had been part of an organization ordered to register as
a foreign agent. In 1968, Cohen's IRS granted
AIPAC tax exempt
status, retroactive to 1953, the year AIPAC first began lobbying as
a division of the American
Zionist Council.
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is presented without profit for research and educational purposes, most importantly understanding how government functions during law enforcement actions involving Israel and its lobbyists. The Israel Lobby Archive has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of the content nor is it endorsed or sponsored by the originator. Information appearing in [ ], hyperlink, or otherwise noted is provided to clarify events, identify individuals, or correct spelling. Non-Israel Lobby Archive hyperlinks are for additional reference information. |