Wednesday, December 3, 2025

When a Void Judgment Becomes a Tax Shield: How a Procedural Fiction Became Leonard Cohen’s Favorite IRS Prop

Every once in a while, a legal document emerges that is so absurd, so brazen, and so spectacularly theatrical that it practically begs for applause. Not because it’s legitimate — but because its audacity is breathtaking.

Such is the case with the 2005 complaint that was never served, the 2006 default judgment no court ever examined, and the immortal “Jane Doe” who supposedly accepted service at Kelley Lynch’s residence… despite never having existed in the first place.

Yet somehow, this procedural fever dream managed to stroll confidently into the Internal Revenue Service, dressed up as “evidence.”

This is the story of how a void judgment reinvented itself as Leonard Cohen’s tax-filing prop.




The Judgment That Lived More Lives Than a Studio Executive

A lawsuit that is never served is supposed to die on impact. Civil Procedure 101.

But in 2005, a process server filed a sworn declaration claiming he served “Jane Doe.” Not Lynch. Not an actual human being. A placeholder name lifted straight from a draft screenplay.

Nevertheless, Los Angeles Superior Court accepted this fiction and entered a default judgment as if service had occurred.

Call it Hollywood magic — minus the artistry, plus the perjury.




How a Nonexistent Service Became IRS “Proof”

Fast forward nearly a decade.

In a January 4, 2014 declaration, Leonard Cohen revealed why this phantom judgment was so essential.

He had been using it.

Not in litigation.
Not in a trial.
Not to establish any facts.

He used it for tax filings.

Cohen admitted that he relied on the default judgment when filing federal and state income-tax returns “from 2005 forward,” and even when amending returns for 2003 and 2004. The judgment became his one-size-fits-all “theft-loss substantiation,” conveniently standing in for the partnership records, entity returns, and financial documentation that were never filed.

This was not a judgment.

It was a backstage pass to IRS refunds.

And Cohen was determined never to surrender it.




The Blonde That Wasn’t: Cohen’s Attempt at Retroactive Cosplay

Cohen’s efforts to legitimize the bogus judgment were no less theatrical.

He asserted — with absolute seriousness — that Lynch was “platinum blonde” in August 2005. She was not. To support this revisionist fantasy, his legal team attached photographs from the early 2000s and from 2006, none taken in August 2005 and none resembling the “Jane Doe” described in the proof of service.

Photographs can enhance a story.

They cannot rewrite time.

If Cohen wanted Lynch to be a blonde in August 2005, he needed a continuity editor, not recycled headshots.








Where the State-Court Fantasy Collides With Federal Law

Here is where the fiction detonates against the Constitution.

Cohen insisted that vacating the judgment would “severely prejudice” him with the IRS because the IRS had “relied on it.” In other words:

“Please don’t disturb the judgment — we already used it on federal tax forms.”

This is not legal prejudice.
It is an unintentional confession.

Once a fraudulent state-court judgment is exported into federal filings and used to influence IRS determinations, the matter shifts from state procedure to federal supremacy. Federal tax law does not defer to paperwork built on imaginary women, defective service, or sworn misrepresentations. The Supremacy Clause exists precisely to prevent state-court artifice from obstructing federal administration.

Cohen’s reliance argument, therefore, proves the opposite of what it intended:
It demonstrates that the judgment was a tool of federal tax obstruction.




The Larger Question: How Many “Jane Doe Judgments” Are Out There?

This case is not an anomaly.

It is an example of how seamlessly a fraudulent state-court judgment can slip into the IRS pipeline and masquerade as legitimate proof. A single false filing — once mailed, faxed, or uploaded — can distort multiple tax years. A nonexistent “Jane Doe” can magically morph into “IRS-accepted substantiation.”

This phenomenon is not common because it is rare.

It is uncommon because it is rarely uncovered.

And that should concern anyone who expects federal agencies to rely on facts rather than procedural fiction.




Conclusion: Even the IRS Deserves Better Than a ‘Jane Doe’ Judgment

Federal tax administration is not meant to depend on creative storytelling, anatomical reinventions, or default judgments born of sworn falsehoods. Yet this is exactly what happened.

A judgment that never should have existed ended up shaping federal tax filings, refund claims, and interstate litigation — all because the legal system failed to stop a defective document before it crossed into the jurisdiction of the United States Treasury.

The IRS deserves better.
Whistleblowers deserve better.
The public deserves a tax system unpolluted by procedural fraud.

The truth is simple:

A judgment obtained by serving “Jane Doe” should never become anyone’s ticket to the Treasury.

Not in 2005.
Not in 2014.
Not now.