Section 7214(b) reads as follows: Any internal revenue officer or employee interested, directly or indirectly, in the manufacture of tobacco, snuff, or cigarettes, or in the production, rectification, or redistillation of distilled spirits, shall be dismissed from office; and each such officer or employee so interested in any such manufacture or production, rectification, or redistillation or production of fermented liquors shall be fined not more than $5,000.
Note the word “shall” be dismissed from office. There’s no way around that. Notice the word “indirectly”. Let’s say a Treasury employee buys almost any mutual fund that owns stock. Chances are one of the stock holdings is Altria or ImBev Altria make cigarettes and is one of the largest distillers in the world. ImBev owns Budweiser which in turn owns lots of other breweries and distilleries. So, simply by owning an interest in a mutual fund that invests in these or other similar companies, is a mandatory firing offense and gets you fined. And remember these mutual fund companies are trading all of the time. So in a moment in time, they might own one of these dreaded stocks.
So, the moral of the story is that if you are an IRS employee, look at what these mutual funds invest in. There are some mutual fund companies that are religious based and do not invest in alcohol or tobacco producing stocks. They returns are not as high, but you can keep your job.