NEED TO KNOW

  • Acting AG signed one-page document Tuesday barring IRS from pursuing pending tax matters against Trump.
  • Provision covers president, his sons, and the Trump Organization — all pending claims included.
  • NYU Tax Law Center says DOJ lacks authority to negotiate IRS audit terms in this case.

WASHINGTON (TDR) — The Justice Department on Tuesday expanded its settlement with President Donald Trump to bar the Internal Revenue Service from pursuing any pending tax claims against the president, his family, or his businesses. The move was quietly executed in a one-page document posted to the department's website.

The big picture: The Tuesday addendum, signed by acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, goes beyond what was announced Monday. It commits the government not to pursue any matters currently pending, including those involving Trump's tax returns.

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Why it matters: Tax law specialists flagged this specific provision a week before it was signed as potentially outside DOJ's legal authority and exposing White House officials to criminal liability under the tax code.

  • The NYU Tax Law Center wrote that DOJ's settlement authority extends only to matters referred for prosecution or defense.
  • Resolving tax liabilities outside the original complaint would require separate IRS agreements with authorized officials signing.
  • Section 7217 of the tax code makes it a crime, carrying up to five years in prison, for White House officials to directly or indirectly request termination of any IRS audit.

Driving the news: Federal Judge Kathleen Williams dismissed the underlying case Monday and admonished the agencies for transparency failures during the settlement process.

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What they're saying:

  • Acting AG Todd Blanche — "The machinery of government should never be weaponized against any American."
  • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. — "If he follows through, it will be the most brazen theft and abuse of taxpayer dollars by any president in American history."

Yes, but: Blanche defended the structure by pointing to the Obama-era Pigford settlement, which compensated Native American farmers who alleged USDA discrimination. The comparison is structural — a fund administering claims after a finding of government misconduct.

  • Pigford was authorized by Congress and reviewed by an independent monitor.
  • The Anti-Weaponization Fund's five-member commission will be appointed entirely by Blanche.
  • Trump retains removal power over commission members.

Between the lines: The Tuesday addendum reveals something about the order of operations. Monday's announcement framed the deal as ending a private lawsuit. Tuesday's quieter filing pulls a separate lever, IRS enforcement, that the department's settlement authority arguably doesn't reach. Whether the document survives legal challenge or quietly takes effect may depend on which actors inside Treasury and IRS sign the closing agreements the Tax Law Center says are required.

What's next:

  • Democratic lawmakers and ethics groups are expected to challenge the tax-claim provision separately from the fund itself.
  • IRS officials face a legal obligation to report any prohibited audit-termination requests to the Treasury Inspector General.
  • Applications for the Anti-Weaponization Fund have not opened; Blanche has not announced a timeline.

Should a sitting president be able to settle a lawsuit he filed against his own government — and where does the line sit between resolving litigation and granting himself enforcement immunity?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from The Washington Post, CBS News, TIME, The Globe and Mail, the News Tribune, the NYU Tax Law Center, and the Justice Department's posted document

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