Some historical and global examples of tax resistance → United States → Vietnam War, ~1965–75 → Francis J. Costello

On , the Gettysburg Times carried an Associated Press article by Mike Duffy about war tax resister Francis J. Costello:

Conscientious Taxpayer Faces Criminal Charges In IRS Battle Over War

“If I have any fear at all in my lifetime, it’s knowing exactly where my conscience is going to take me.”

Francis J. Costello’s conscience now has him battling with the federal government. At 33, a high school teacher, a husband and expectant father, Costello faces the loss of part of his salary and the eventual possibility of imprisonment.

One of the thousands of “conscientious taxpayers” who refuse to pay part or all of their taxes because of their opposition to war, Costello sees himself as struggling to maintain his personal integrity against the Internal Revenue Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Justice and, the ultimate foe, the Department of Defense.

The President and Congress may continue to debate over whether to provide further military aid to Indochina, whether to fund new weapons systems or whether to spend enough next year to maintain the position of the United States as the world’s leading military power. Costello and other individuals like him simply refuse to pay for it.

Court Decision

On , a federal judge handed down a decision against Costello in a civil action brought by the IRS for nonpayment of $659 in taxes for .

“Neither the First Amendment nor the other legal principles relied upon by the petitioner nor the evident sincerity of his beliefs furnishes any basis for granting him relief from his obligation to comply with the income tax law,” the judge wrote.

Conscience or not, Costello must pay the taxes, and the IRS will have the right to confiscate his wages to get the money, the court held. Costello says he will appeal.

Now the government is considering whether to file criminal charges against him for his tax returns of . Costello claimed as many as 10 exemptions so that less money would be withheld from his paycheck for taxes in proportion to the share of the Defense Department in the federal budget.

Spent on Community

Costello says he took the extra money and poured it into community projects of his own choosing. But the law says falsely inflating exemptions is fraud, and he could wind up in prison.

There are others like Costello.

An IRS spokesman said the for the year , at the height of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war, there were 1,740 tax returns readily identifiable as protest returns for war resistance or other reasons; for fiscal , the number dropped to 667, although he said many such returns could go undetected.

The full scope of the protest might be more accurately reflected in the number of persons withholding payment of the federal excise tax on their telephone bills, a tax imposed specifically to pay for war costs. There were 56,445 instances in compared to 50,371 in fiscal , the IRS spokesman said.

“Normally we take collection action,” he said. “A lot of them make the token protest, but then they get the notice and pay it.”

If they don’t pay, the IRS can use such devices as levies on wages and “every once in a while some of them become criminal cases.”

Costello says he is very much afraid that his case will reach the stage of criminal prosecution. But as long as money is being poured into military expenditures, he says he feels obliged by conscience to resist.

“When I started this, the war was going on and we were a direct part of it. The only difference today is that our participation in it is not as evident,” he says.

Even if all wars were to cease, Costello says he would feel obliged to resist contributing to “defense” costs because “under the posture of nonviolence, there is really no such thing as self-defense when it involves the taking of another life.”

Costello says he first developed pacifist convictions while studying for the Roman Catholic priesthood in Brooklyn in the early 1960s. He left the seminary one year from ordination and immediately applied for and won “conscientious objector” status with the draft board.

He earned a masters degree in social work and was a community organizer for Catholic Charities in Brooklyn. He says that when he began his tax resistance in , things got uncomfortable for him at the Catholic agency, which depends heavily on government funding. Costello also said he was having differences with the agency over tactics, so he quit rather than force them to fire them.

By this time he had gotten married. He turned to teaching. Now he is going to nursing school three nights a week so he can gain another skill to broaden his options of serving the community.

If he persists in his tax resistance, he could lose his income — $13,000 when he was a social worker and $9,400 now as a teacher — and he could wind up in prison before he completes nursing school. And his first child is due in a month.


On , The Milwaukee Journal printed an expanded version of an Associated Press article I drew attention to mashed up with the one I reprinted :

War Tax Protesters Face Loss of Property, Freedom

By the Associated Press

Paul Snyder and his wife, Addie, of Fremont, Mich., saw their home sold for the taxes they refused to pay to support the wars they opposed.

But the property — sold at an Internal Revenue Service bid opening at the Fremont Post Office — went to a friend, and the Snyders said they would buy it back.

There are others like the Snyders — who have lost their property or even gone to prison for refusing to pay taxes to support wars. And, like the Snyders, they say they believe their protests were worthwhile and that they’ll continue them.

The Snyders withheld the portion they believed went to the Defense Department based on that agency’s share of the national budget. Snyder, 42, a veterinarian, said the total amounted to about 45% of their taxes.

Mrs. Snyder said the Cambodian invasion was responsible for turning a “pair of hard working Republicans” into war protesters and tax evaders.

They said they used the money for alternative purposes — mostly in Newaygo County on rural poverty projects — because “we believe in paying taxes.”

The Snyders’ $80,000 home was put up for sale by the IRS for the $3,023 in taxes owed for . The purchaser, with a high bid of $8,460, was Carol Blizzard of Holton, who represented a group of Snyder friends who will sell the home back to the Snyders.

In New York City, another taxpayer, Frank J. Costello, 33, a high school teacher, husband, and expectant father, faces the loss of part of his salary and the eventual possibility of imprisonment for his war tax protest.

On , a federal judge handed down a decision against Costello in a civil action brought by the IRS for nonpayment of $659 in taxes for . The IRS will have the right to confiscate his wages to get the money, the court held. Costello says he will appeal.

Now the government is considering whether to file criminal charges against him for his tax returns of . Costello claimed as many as 10 exemptions so that less money would be withheld from his paycheck for taxes in proportion to the share of the Defense Department in the federal budget.

Costello says he took the extra money and put it into community projects of his own choosing. But the law says falsely inflating exemptions is fraud, and he could wind up in prison.

There are others like Costello and the Snyders.

Martha Tranquilli, 64, was released from a federal prison in California after serving 7½ months for tax fraud for claiming antiwar organizations as dependents.

Ernest Bromley, 63, has been withholding taxes since the 1940s because of his pacifist views. His two acre farm in Butler County, Ohio, was confiscated last month.

An IRS spokesman said that in , at the height of US involvement in the Vietnam War, 1,740 tax returns were readily identifiable as protest returns for war resistance or other reasons. For fiscal , the number dropped to 667, although the spokesman said many such returns could go undetected.

The full scope of the protest might be more accurately reflected in the number of persons withholding payment of the federal excise tax on their telephone bills, a tax imposed specifically to pay for war costs. There were 56,445 instances in compared with 50,371 in fiscal , the IRS spokesman said.


From the Richmond County [North Carolina] Daily Journal:

Conscientious Taxpayer

 — “If I have any fear at all in my lifetime, it’s knowing exactly where my conscience is going to take me.”

Francis J. Costello’s conscience now has him battling with the federal government. At 33, a high school teacher, a husband and expectant father, Costello faces the loss of part of his salary and the eventual possibility of imprisonment.

One of the thousands of “conscientious taxpayers” who refuse to pay part or all of their taxes because of their opposition to war, Costello sees himself as struggling to maintain his personal integrity against the Internal Revenue Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Justice and, the ultimate foe, the Department of Defense.

The President and Congress may continue to debate over whether to provide further military aid to Indochina, whether to fund new weapons systems or whether to spend enough next year to maintain the position of the United States as the world’s leading military power. Costello and other individuals like him simply refuse to pay for it.

On , a federal judge handed down a decision against Costello in a civil action brought by the IRS for nonpayment of $659 in taxes for .

“Neither the First Amendment nor the other legal principles relied upon by the petitioner nor the evident sincerity of his beliefs furnishes any basis for granting him relief from his obligation to comply with the income tax law,” the judge wrote.

Conscience or not, Costello must pay the taxes, and the IRS will have the right to confiscate his wages to get the money, the court held. Costello says he will appeal.

Now the government is considering whether to file criminal charges against him for his tax returns of . Costello claimed as many as 10 exemptions so that less money would be withheld from his paycheck for taxes in proportion to the share of the Defense Department in the federal budget.

Costello says he took the extra money and poured it into community projects of his own choosing. But the law says falsely inflating exemptions is fraud, and he could wind up in prison.

There are others like Costello.

An IRS spokesman said that for , at the height of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war, there were 1,740 tax returns readily identifiable as protest returns for war resistance or other reasons; for , the number dropped to 667, although he said many such returns could go undetected.

The full scope of the protest might be more accurately reflected in the number of persons withholding payment of the federal excise tax on their telephone bills, a tax imposed specifically to pay for war costs. There were 56,445 instances in compared to 50,371 in , the IRS spokesman said.

“Normally we take collection action,” he said. “A lot of them make the token protest, but then they get the notice and pay it.”

If they don’t pay, the IRS can use such devices as levies on wages and “every once in a while some of them become criminal cases.”

Costello says he is very much afraid that his case will reach the stage of criminal prosecution. But as long as money is being poured into military expenditures, he says he feels obliged by conscience to resist.

“When I started this, the war was going on and we were a direct part of it. The only difference today is that our participation in it is not as evident,” he says.

Even if all wars were to cease, Costello says he would feel obliged to resist contributing to “defense” costs because “under the posture of nonviolence, there is really no such thing as self-defense when it involves the taking of another life.”

Costello says he first developed pacifist convictions while studying for the Roman Catholic priesthood in Brooklyn in . He left the seminary one year from ordination and immediately applied for and won “conscientious objector” status with the draft board.

He earned a masters degree in social work and was a community organizer for Catholic Charities in Brooklyn. He says that when he began his tax resistance in , things got uncomfortable for him at the Catholic agency, which depends heavily on government funding. Costello also said he was having differences with the agency over tactics, so he quit rather than force them to fire him.

By this time he had gotten married. He turned to teaching. Now he is going to nursing school three nights a week so he can gain another skill to broaden his options of serving the community.

If he persists in his tax resistance, he could lose his income — $13,000 when he was a social worker and $9,400 now as a teacher — and he could wind up in prison before he completes nursing school. And his first child is due in a month.