In The Last 3 Years Alone, IRS Has Dropped $10 Million On Weapons, Ammo, And Tactical Gear

According to a new report from a watchdog group, the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has spent at least $10 million on weapons, ammunition, and other tactical gear since 2020.

The report was compiled by watchdog organization Open the Books — which tracks government spending — and contains data through the end of March. “The Militarization of Federal Bureaucracy – Updated Statistics Through March 31, 2023” was released to the public last Thursday.

According to the report, the federal tax agency spent more than $5 million just in 2021 — and since 2020, $2.3 million has gone to pay for ammunition; $474,000 has gone to Smith & Wesson rifles; and $463,000 has gone to Beretta 1301 tactical shotguns.

In addition, the IRS has dumped more than $1 million dollars into defensive tactical gear — $243,000 for body armor vests and $1.2 million for ballistic shields.

Another $1.3 million was earmarked for “various other gear for criminal investigation agents” — and the IRS has also stockpiled helmets, tactical lighting, holsters, and more.

The report from Open the Books comes in the wake of President Joe Biden’s multi-billion dollar Inflation Reduction Act — which would divert billions to the IRS to hire more agents.

The IRS asks that applicants be willing to “carry a firearm; must be prepared to protect him/herself or others from physical attacks at any time and without warning and use firearms in life-threatening situations; must be willing to use force up to and including the use of deadly force.”

According to officials, IRS special agents carry firearms because they are expected to manage cases involving organized crime and drug trafficking.

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Prior to 2020, according to Open the Books, the IRS had already stocked up on weapons and tactical gear and millions of rounds of ammunition, spending over $30 million (adjusted for inflation) since 2006 on such items.

Prior to its most recent spending, the agency owned more than 4000 firearms — ranging from pump action shotguns to semi-automatic rifles to sub-machine guns.

Karine Jean-Pierre Stonewalls Questions On President’s Unacknowledged Arkansas Grandchild

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused to answer questions about Hunter Biden and his four-year-old daughter Navy, President Joe Biden’s unacknowledged seventh grandchild, on Tuesday.

Navy lives with her mother, former stripper Lunden Roberts, in Arkansas. Roberts is currently battling with the president’s son in court over $20,000 monthly paternity payments, which Hunter is seeking to have decreased, according to CNN.

Asked about the paternity case and the White House’s failure to acknowledge Navy, Jean-Pierre refused to answer.

“I wanted to ask about the trial going on in Arkansas with Hunter Biden and the child support. Are the president and first lady monitoring that? And how come they haven’t acknowledged the seventh grandchild?” asked Emily Goodwin, U.S. politics reporter for the U.K.’s Daily Mail.

“I’m not going to speak to that from here,” answered Jean-Pierre.

The press secretary also ignored a quick follow-up from James Rosen, the chief White House correspondent for Newsmax.

Daily Mail's @EmilyLGoodin: "I wanted to ask about the trial…in Arkansas w/Hunter Biden & the child support. Are [Joe & Jill Biden] monitoring that & how come they haven't acknowledged the 7th grandchild?"

KJP: "I'm not gonna speak to that from here"

James Rosen: "Why not?" pic.twitter.com/TARVeT7K6L

— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) May 2, 2023

The president and his son have repeatedly refused to acknowledge Navy, even after a court-ordered paternity test proved that Navy is Hunter’s daughter. The president bragged about his grandchildren last week during a “take your child to work day” event at the White House. Biden listed six grandchildren, leaving off Navy.

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“The best part of it all, I have six grandchildren, and I’m crazy about them. I speak to them every single day,” Biden said. “Not a joke,” he added.

Hunter appeared in an Arkansas courtroom on Monday after Roberts’ legal team accused him of refusing to comply with a court order to produce fulsome financial records. Roberts’ attorneys have argued that Hunter should produce his records — including assets such as cars and houses and the amount of money he has made selling amateur artwork — to prove that his paternity payments should be decreased.

Independence County Circuit Court Judge Holly Meyer scolded Hunter in the courtroom for providing overly redacted records, saying their ability to keep certain information out of the public eye was “being somewhat abused,” according to CNN.

In addition to the legal battle over paternity payments, Roberts is also attempting to get Navy’s last name, currently the same as her mother’s, legally changed to “Biden.” The Biden family name is “now synonymous with being well educated, successful, financially acute, and politically powerful,” Roberts’ attorneys wrote in a court filing in December.

Roberts’ attorneys said that changing Navy’s last name to her father’s would make her “known to the world” as a “member of the prestigious Biden family,” according to The New York Times.

Hunter’s legal team is fighting Roberts’ request. Hunter’s attorneys wrote in a response that Roberts had not shown that changing Navy’s name was in her best interest.

“The child should have the opportunity for input at a time when the disparagement of the Biden name is not at its height,” Hunter’s attorneys wrote. “The notoriety would no doubt rob this child of peaceful existence.”