Uh Oh... The Guy Who Worked to Get President Trump Dropped from Ballots May Be in Big Trouble
Robert Spencer : Jan 12, 2024
PJ Media
Court documents stated that he "would promise a significantly higher refund than taxpayers could receive from other preparers and on many occasions, offered to split the additional refund with taxpayers. In order to achieve these larger refunds, Castro generated false deductions, that were not based in fact, and which were submitted without the taxpayer's knowledge."
[PJMedia.com] Oh, the irony: a man who has worked for years to get Trump dropped from ballots because he supposedly led an "insurrection" is now facing federal tax charges, which, like Trump and the Jan. 6 nonsense, he vehemently denies. So now John Anthony Castro, a man who also wants to be your next president, knows what it feels like to be saddled with charges that he insists are false. (Screengrab image)
For several years now, Castro has dedicated his life to trapping and destroying the left's great enemy: he has filed numerous challenges to Trump's eligibility to appear on presidential ballots on the claim that he led an "insurrection." He has, however, found the time to keep busy with other matters as well: The Hill reported that Castro "was arrested Tuesday on charges alleging he filed 17 sets of false tax documents to the IRS."
Castro, a graduate of Georgetown University Law School, is not even close to being a serious human being: he bills himself as a "2024 Republican Presidential Candidate Suing Trump to Disqualify Him for January 6." So even if Castro had the remotest chance of becoming the Republicans' 2024 nominee, he simultaneously demonstrates that he is wholly unsuitable as a candidate because of his participation in the left's authoritarian efforts to remove the man whom he apparently sees as his chief competitor from the competition.
And now, as if it weren't enough to be a foe of the democratic process whom nobody has ever heard of, Castro has the added handicap of federal tax charges. Court documents stated that he "would promise a significantly higher refund than taxpayers could receive from other preparers and on many occasions, offered to split the additional refund with taxpayers. In order to achieve these larger refunds, Castro generated false deductions, that were not based in fact, and which were submitted without the taxpayer's knowledge."
Should a man who engaged in such practices, if Castro really did, become president? Should he be the one who determines whom Americans can vote in as their president, and whom they cannot?... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here
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