Makes you want to puke

A word from our sponsor:

Printer-friendly version

Author: 

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

Was forwarded to me this morning:

High emotions were on display as trial got under way to decide whether a sex change operation constitutes a medical deduction undersection 213. O'Donnabhain v. Commissioner, U.S. Tax Court Docket No. 6402-06, commenced July 24 in Boston with Judge Joseph Gale presiding.

At issue is whether the taxpayer, Rhiannon O'Donnabhain, is allowed to take medical deductions on her return for over $ 25,000 in costs she incurred in 2001 related to a sex change operation to go from male to female. The IRS initially gave O'Donnabhain a refund on her 2001 return based on her claimed medical deductions. However, after a subsequent audit, the IRS disallowed her deductions relating to the sex change operation, based largely in part on a legal memorandum issued by the IRS Office of Chief Counsel that found such costs were not deductible under section 213.

The legal memorandum (ILM 200603025) inquired whether a taxpayer claiming a medical deduction for the expense associated with a sex change operation to treat gender identity disorder (GID) was allowed to take the deduction under section 213. The memorandum concluded that the operation constituted a "cosmetic surgery" that was exempted from the definition of medical care contemplated under the statute. The IRS's analysis held that the legislative intent of the statute, which had been amended in 1990 to specifically exclude cosmetic surgeries from qualifying for the deduction, was to restrict surgical procedures that were not medically necessary and did not treat a disfiguring condition (such as a congenital abnormality, personal injury, trauma, or disease). The IRS concluded that gender reassignment surgery was controversial, and so extension of the parameters of medical deductibility should not occur absent "unequivocal expression of Congressional intent." (For ILM 200603025, see Doc 2006-1195 or 2006 TNT 14-12.)

Hyping the Trial

At the start of trial, the parties brought several issues to the court's attention. The IRS invoked Tax Court Rule 145 to exclude prospective witnesses from the courtroom while other witnesses are testifying. The IRS also complained about the publicity the case has been receiving in the media and blamed the taxpayer's counsel for hyping the trial -- particularly in a note on the Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders Web site that said O'Donnabhain's lawyers would be providing updated blogs over the course of trial. When asked, counsel stated they would not post blogs during trial. Judge Gale instructed petitioner's counsel to have witnesses avoid reading the organization's Web site or related blogs providing commentary or trial coverage.

O'Donnabhain's legal team objected to the relevance of evidence of the taxpayer's additional surgeries in 2002 and 2005 for facial feminization surgery and breast implants. Her counsel said that such evidence was irrelevant to the issue of whether the medical procedures in 2001 were necessary and noncosmetic under section 213. Judge Gale, while declining to offer a specific ruling in the matter at the time, said he was inclined to overrule the taxpayer's objection to the evidence.

Both sides presented opening statements. The petitioner stressed the diagnosis by a qualified medical professional of GID in O'Donnabhain and said GID was recognized by the medical community as a mental disorder. The taxpayer's counsel said O'Donnabhain's operation was the culmination of successive levels of treatment, and that O'Donnabhain met all the prequalifications under the accepted standards of care for surgery. The surgery was a way to "end discordance between [the taxpayer's] GID and her anatomy," counsel said. The operation was not directed at improving the petitioner's appearance but at treating a debilitating medical condition.

The IRS argued that the evidence showed the petitioner had undergone numerous surgeries over the past several years -- including rhinoplasty, Botox injections, and a face lift -- that were intended to make her look like a woman. Likewise, the operation to remove her male genitalia and insert breast implants was meant to alter her appearance. These procedures did not have the primary purpose of changing a naturally occurring body function and thus fell under Congress's intent to exclude them from medical deductibility under the cosmetic exception.

The IRS also questioned the notion that GID was accepted by the medical community, stating that the petitioner's reliance on a medical diagnostic manual for mental disorders was misplaced, as the purpose of the manual was to assign standardized healthcare codes for billing purposes and did not represent a treatment textbook. As such, the manual was a "guideline only" and not binding on the court for the legal definition of a medical term. Another significant point for the IRS was that sex reassignment surgery was an "elective" procedure equivalent to a personal expense.

Of Medical Necessity

A packed courtroom listened as O'Donnabhain took the stand. She recalled her hard upbringing in a small, rural town outside of Boston in a traditional Irish Catholic family. O'Donnabhain testified that she was confused from early in her childhood about her unhappiness with her male gender and the roles expected of her as an anatomic male -- particularly dating and sports. She said she remembers dressing in women's clothing and feeling ashamed that someone in her family might find out. She studied civil engineering, got married, and had three children, all the while feeling confused and unhappy, she said.

O'Donnabhain said that after her marriage ended in 1992, she started psychotherapy with a licensed clinical social worker who diagnosed her with GID. As part of her counseling sessions, O'Donnabhain discussed various levels of treatment options. She started undergoing cross-gender hormone therapy in 1997 and underwent several facial feminization techniques. She said she experienced a "sense of well-being" after those measures but still didn't feel sufficiently female. After 12 months of completing real-life tests in which she lived a full-fledged female lifestyle, she had a sex change operation -- which she called the "light at the end of the tunnel" -- to remove her male genitalia and have breast implants inserted.

On cross-examination of O'Donnabhain, the IRS questioned her timing of the sex change operation. The government referred to evidence that showed she contemplated surgery earlier but decided to wait until her youngest son went to college. The implication seemed to be that if the petitioner waited, the surgery was not medically necessary.

The taxpayer's second witness was her psychotherapist, who has a specialty in gender conditions. The therapist said she diagnosed the petitioner with severe GID because of the overwhelming distress she exhibited. The therapist's evaluation ruled out other problems O'Donnabhain had as the cause of her extreme emotional pain and discomfort. Over the course of 100 sessions the therapist had with the petitioner, she concluded sex reassignment surgery was necessary so that O'Donnabhain would feel congruent with her physical body.

In the IRS's cross-examination of the psychotherapist, the respondent's counsel questioned O'Donnabhain's impairment, noting that she had at the time a good, steady job and had a relationship with her children, who knew of her intentions to receive surgery. Judge Gale allowed into admission as evidence a letter the therapist wrote to the doctor who performed the taxpayer's sex change operation that O'Donnabhain qualified under the standards of care for surgery.

The last witness of the day was the psychologist who provided the second opinion on O'Donnabhain's eligibility for sex reassignment surgery. The psychologist testified that after meeting with the taxpayer for two hours, he had concluded that GID was the main source of O'Donnabhain's mental disorder and so seconded the clinical social worker's opinion that surgery was necessary. However, the IRS seemed to poke holes in the psychologist's credibility on cross-examination. The government, upon questioning, elicited a reluctant response from the witness that he was a transsexual who had gone by a female's name while he received his undergraduate degree, creating a possible inference of bias in his testimony. In addition, the respondent's counsel stressed the fact that the psychologist had only met with the taxpayer for less than two hours -- and didn't inquire into past mental illness -- before reaching his ultimate conclusion.

O'Donnabhain expects to call two more medical professionals as witnesses in the case this week. The IRS will put one expert witness on the stand this week to rebut the validity of GID as a recognized medical condition and will have another medical expert testify in August when the case is resumed.

Comments

What do you expect?

What do you expect from the iRS. They're the worse kind of people. They'll spend a hundred thousand dollars just to collect ten. The workers are completely devoid of logic. I have a theory about this country that is built on two pyramids. The first pyramid is a buisness pyramid. At the top is all the peolpe that are self employed. The next layer down are the people that work in private industry. The next layer down are govenment workers, police, fire fighters, teachers, etc. The next layer are the make work government workers and the final layer are the tax collectors. They're the ones that can't find work anywhere else. Next comes the power pyramid. You invert the previous pyramid, Now a person that's not qualified to even think on their own has the power to ruin your life, and they relish doing it. The tax collectors are at the top and the business owner is at the bottom, and the IRS is the worse, I know because I've been there, Arecee

A real travesty

Is something known as 'The Widow Penalty'. Legal immigrant spouses of US citizens who face deportation because their wife or usually husband died before the immigration paperwork is finished. This started as the result of a administrative ruling in 1970, a sailor died of a heart attack and INS wanted to deport his wife. Saying the wife has lost status as a immigrant relative because their husband died. The Filipino born wife lost her case in 1970, and was deported. Such a nice reward for her husband who served this country.

It took over 30 years, but spouses of servicemembers who die on active duty don't face that danger anymore, but how many were sent home by ungrateful government in the interim. The Widow Penalty is still at play for legal immigrants in this country, lawyers are fighting it with a class action suit, and have won a battle or two in US District courts for a one or two spouses. Still over 100 women are facing deportation.

Go here if you want to read more. A bill was recently passed by the a US House Judiciary committee to end this nonsense. It still has to go through the whole House and The Senate. Time is a wasting.

Einstein described insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the result to change. Was Albert a reader of TG fiction then?

Daniel, author of maid, whore, bimbo, and sissy free TG fiction since 2000

What the world needs is more geniuses with humility; there are so few of us left.- Oscar Levant

AP News Story Well-Balanced

The MSNBC web page of the AP news story looks very fair, even sympathetic with the plaintiff's case.

I don't know how Tax Court works, whether there's a jury or not, but I don't see how the IRS is going to win this case. Further, I don't see how the Federal government could be serious about pursuing a case to prove there's no difference between male and female except a cosmetic one. Wouldn't that negate the entire "Defense of Marriage Act" nonsense, along with all the rest of their institutional homophobia?

Actually, it'd be hilarious if the government pursued and won that line of reasoning and it got used as precedent to negate all their socially backwards positions! Oh, well. That's not going to happen. For starters, the IRS is going to lose this case. Even if they don't, though, Tax Court rulings don't become precedence for District Courts. Pity.

IRS

so the IRS are trying to prove that GID doesnt really exist. that it is not a real disorder, going against the medical profession now. Well we always knew the US federal goverment were a bunch of biggots. now theres proof
the IRS has put the entire notion of GID on trial now threatening the safety all transsexuals within the united states.

the only thing worse than being a tax accountant...

is being a good one.

I trained as a tax accountant in my youth, in private practice, and was shamefully good at it... I spent my days surrounded by volumes of Tolley's tax law, looking for loopholes, but I was not quite one of the good guys... the firm I worked for charged £300 (this was the late eighties) an hour for tax consultations (I was on a training contract, so was paid £333 per calendar month, for a five year period to defer the costs of my training, even after I qualified), so if you could afford that you could avoid paying tax... in some cases 'avoid' was 'evade' and I was to an extent a professional liar... it's part of what started me off on my problem drinking in my twenties (one of my most extreme benders back then was half-jokingly referred to by friends as my 'suicide attempt').

I don't think my family ever understood why I resigned, or why my next job was driving forklifts :)

Way Back When

it was common practice to declare all of your GID related expenses for the year you had SRS, so therapy, medications, electrology for that year and everything done during your SRS stay, travel and accomodations. That could easily add up to a pile of money.

AMA Resolution 122

The American Medical Association recently came out and said flat-out that GID is a serious medical condition, and SRS is medically necessary "for many people diagnosed with GID." (The full text of Resolution 122 is here.)

I don't see how the IRS has a leg to stand on here. They can't seriously think their "experts" are more credible than the AMA, can they?

surprise surprise

laika's picture

Apparently the IRS cited the writings of our old buddy Dr. Paul McHugh.
He's an expert. He's a big old expert.

If by expert you mean he sucks the maggots
out of dead dog's assholes
.
(That was a profanity.)
~~hugs, Laika

Was the Resolution Passed?

The text at the link just indicates that the resolution was introduced and referred to an AMA committee. Does your comment, justme, mean that subsequently the resolution was passed? This is a perplexing matter for the TS/TG community. Some of us don't like being categorized as having a mental disorder and have campaigned for removing the entry on GID from the psychologist's bible, DSM-IV. But obviously if that were done, Rhiannon wouldn't have a case. The IRS meanwhile takes the absurd and indefensible position that DSM-IV is simply a reference book that gives codes for billing purposes! I suppose they are accurately reflecting the disposition of Congress, which has made it very clear that anyone on a federal employee's health plan can't claim insurance benefits for 'sex-change' surgery. Don't look for much backbone from our elected representatives, but I think Rhiannon's going to win her case. Daphne [btw,you types who are ranting about civil servants being some low form of humanity are running down millions of people who work/worked hard to serve their country -- me included.] Hugs to the rest of you, Daphne

Daphne

It was passed.

I'm with those who want GID out of the DSM. A pain or source of distress that can be resolved by surgery isn't a psychiatric condition; it's a medical one. The AMA resolution is a big first step toward the medical community recognizing that. Rhiannon's arguments would hold up just as well if not better when seen in that light. Ideally along with deletion from the DSM there'd be some formal recognition of it as a medical condition--say, by moving it out of the mental disorders section of the ICD but not removing it entirely.