Schulz Rebukes DOJ Letter to Congressman
US Asst. Attorney General Refuses to Answer Questions

In January, 2002, Rep. Bartlett (Maryland) formally requested that DOJ respond to specific legal questions submitted as a Petition for Redress of Grievances by the We The People Foundation in order to obtain official government responses regarding significant matters of US income tax law, federal jurisdiction and Constitutional violations posed by the current law enforcement practices of DOJ and IRS relating to the federal income tax system.

On November 21, 2002, We The People Foundation came into possession of a letter dated April 18th, 2002 sent from US Assistant Attorney General Dan Bryant to Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (Maryland) articulating the reasons Department of Justice was proffering for refusing to answer a formal Congressional request for answers to the Peoples' Petition for Redress of Grievances.

Read the letter from DOJ Asst. Attorney General Bryant to Rep. Bartlett:   

  Please right-click the link above to download the letter before opening it780 KB, in .pdf format  

To read the DOJ Letter in HTML format click here:  Page 1   Page 2   Page 3

Bob Schulz, Chairman of We The People Foundation responds directly to US Assistant Attorney General Dan Bryant in a letter dated December, 2002.

Because of the size of Schulz's response, it has been divided into three sections:

Part 1Schulz demands an apology.  No Redress, NO Taxes.
Part 2Brief history of the respectful, repeated petitions for redress.
Part 3Point-by-point rebuttal continues.  Conclusions.

  Please note that many of the Exhibits to this response require the free Adobe Reader software.
Go to www.Adobe.com to get the free Reader.

Also note that some of the attached exhibits are somewhat large, can be several MB in size and can appear to "lock up" your machine when attempting to open them directly.

Viewers are urged to download the files that seem to be giving them problems onto their hard disk first before viewing them.  This is done by "right-clicking" the desired file and saving the "target" to their PC.