“We can set these kinds of guidelines before it is fully adopted and given its history, shouldn’t accept anything less,” he concluded.
An undercover report from an investigative journalist working with conservative activist James O’Keefe disclosed the alarming scope of the agency’s reliance on AI technology.
Alex Mena, a member of the IRS Criminal Investigations Unit, told the female journalist in a candid interview that he “doubts the constitutionality” of the IRS information gathering, which is overseen not by the Treasury Department but the Justice Department.
“We have, like, all the information from all the companies in the whole world actually, not just in the United States,” he confessed.
BREAKING: IRS official Alex Mena who works in “Criminal Investigations” says @IRSNews, ‘has no problem going after the small people, putting people in prison, and destroying people’s lives.’
Mena ‘doubts the constitutionality’ of his employer, the IRS, using AI to access… pic.twitter.com/KexsoTlMbz
— James O’Keefe (@JamesOKeefeIII) February 21, 2024
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