Monday, July 13, 2026

Judge Rules Trump-IRS Settlement Was The Result Of Sham Suit & No $1.8 billion “Anti‑Weaponization Fund”

The case is a high‑stakes civil action brought by Donald Trump, his sons, and the Trump Organization against the IRS and Treasury over the unlawful disclosure of their tax return information, which has since turned into a vehicle for probing an unusual “anti‑weaponization” settlement fund and possible fraud on the court.

Parties and procedural posture

The plaintiffs are President Donald J. Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Eric Trump, and The Trump Organization LLC, suing the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Department of the Treasury in the Southern District of Florida (Case No. 26‑20609‑CV‑Williams). The nature of suit is listed as “Other Statutory Actions” with a tax‑liability cause under 26 U.S.C. § 7401. The case arises from leaks of Trump‑related tax information by an IRS contractor, who was later prosecuted and sentenced for unauthorized disclosures that revealed Trump paid little or no federal income tax in several years.

Claims and factual background

Trump and his co‑plaintiffs allege that IRS personnel (or contractors) unlawfully disclosed their confidential tax return information, causing massive reputational and economic harm and justifying a damages claim reportedly pegged as high as $10 billion. The suit is framed as seeking redress for “weaponization” of the tax system—i.e., using confidential return data for political or media purposes—rather than challenging the underlying tax liabilities. The backdrop includes the public reporting, based on leaked returns, that Trump paid minimal income tax over years despite substantial earnings from ventures such as “The Apprentice.”


Subject‑matter jurisdiction concerns and amici

Judge Kathleen Williams (Miami Division, S.D. Fla.) sua sponte questioned whether the court has subject‑matter jurisdiction, given that Trump—as sitting president—effectively controls the IRS he is suing, raising the possibility there is no genuine adversarial controversy. To assist with the jurisdictional analysis, the court appointed prominent attorneys—including John Gleeson, David O’Neil, Donald Verrilli Jr., Faith Gay, Philippe Selendy, and Corey Stoughton—as amici curiae, directing them to file a memorandum on jurisdiction by May 21, 2026. Their role is to brief whether Article III requirements, sovereign‑immunity doctrines, and related statutory constraints permit the suit to proceed when the plaintiff is the head of the executive branch controlling the defendant agencies.

The settlement, dismissal, and “anti‑weaponization” fund

On May 18, 2026, Trump and his co‑plaintiffs filed a voluntary dismissal, and the court entered an order dismissing the case with prejudice. That same day, the Department of Justice publicly announced a settlement involving the creation of a roughly $1.8 billion “anti‑weaponization fund” intended to compensate individuals who claim they were targeted or “weaponized” by federal enforcement actions, including alleged politically motivated prosecutions. DOJ also released an addendum purporting to “permanently bar” IRS audits or enforcement actions against Trump, his family, and certain affiliates with respect to prior returns, effectively creating a forward‑looking audit shield. Critics, including bipartisan lawmakers and legal experts, have condemned the fund as a potential “slush fund” lacking clear statutory authorization or congressional appropriation and as a mechanism by which Trump could reward allies and indirectly benefit his own family.

Motions alleging fraud on the court and reopening

A group of 35 former federal judges moved to intervene or otherwise be heard, arguing that the post‑dismissal “settlement” and fund raise serious concerns of collusion and fraud on the court under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60. They contend the court was deceived because the plaintiffs’ voluntary dismissal and the government’s public announcement of a settlement were not candidly disclosed or submitted to the court, yet appeared coordinated to insulate the agreement from judicial scrutiny. The former judges assert that Trump leveraged the litigation to obtain unlawful private gains—namely, broad immunity from IRS scrutiny and access to taxpayer‑funded compensation—without congressional approval and while evading court review of the settlement terms.

Responding to these concerns, Judge Williams reopened the case to investigate whether the settlement and the anti‑weaponization fund are the product of collusion and amount to a fraud on the court. She ordered Trump’s counsel to address whether the parties are genuinely adverse, whether the court was a “victim of a fraud,” and how the “forever” non‑audit agreement fits within the permissible scope of executive authority; she also signaled that Justice Department officials, including the acting attorney general, may be required to testify. Separately, another federal court has issued a temporary injunction blocking establishment of the fund and any payouts, adding another layer of legal uncertainty.

Practical implications and issues for tax practitioners

For practitioners, the case spotlights several issues:

·         The boundaries of IRS and contractor liability for unauthorized disclosures of return information, and potential damages theories under confidentiality and tax‑administration statutes.

·         The limits of executive‑branch settlement authority to grant forward‑looking audit protection or effectively waive future enforcement, especially where such relief resembles legislative action without congressional approval.

·         The circumstances under which a civil tax‑related suit can be reopened under Rule 60 on the theory of “fraud on the court,” and how courts assess collusion between nominally adverse public and private parties.

·         Broader separation‑of‑powers concerns if a sitting president uses litigation against his own agencies to secure individualized benefits, including immunity from tax audits and access to off‑budget funds.

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Sources: 

1.       https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/USCOURTS-flsd-1_26-cv-20609    

2.      https://tax.thomsonreuters.com/news/trump-ends-10b-legal-battle-with-irs-as-doj-orders-settlement-fund/  

3.      https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/30/trump-irs-suit-reopened           

4.      https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/roz9qpDuMr6g/v0  

5.       https://www.law360.com/cases/697c17c42d35e0176519b352?article_sidebar=1

6.      https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn0pk2e22jro    

7.       https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/27/trump-irs-case-judge-fraud-doj-fund.html  

8.      https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1441201/dl?inline

9.      https://www.citizen.org/wp-content/uploads/Trump-settlement-FOIA-letter-Treasury.pdf

10.   https://democracyforward.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/IRS-complaint-CENTER-FOR-TAXPAYER-RIGHTS-et-al-v.-INTERNAL-REVENUE-SERVICE-et-al-.pdf

11.    https://www.law360.co.uk/cases/697c17c42d35e0176519b352/articles

12.   https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/24-1287_4gcj.pdf

13.   https://illinoisattorneygeneral.gov/News-Room/Current-News/CORRECTED Trump v IRS AG Mot for Leave to File Amicus.pdf?language_id=1

14.   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_v._Internal_Revenue_Service

https://clearinghouse.net/case/47782/


Friday, July 10, 2026

New IRS QDOT Rules: Key Updates for Cross-Border Estate Planning


The IRS has finalized long-overdue updates to the regulations governing qualified domestic trusts (QDOTs), modernizing rules that have remained largely unchanged since the 1990s. Issued as T.D. 10050 on July 10, 2026, these amendments are primarily technical but carry practical implications for estate planners working with noncitizen surviving spouses.

Background on QDOTs

QDOTs remain a critical planning tool for estates involving non-U.S. citizen spouses. Because the unlimited marital deduction under Internal Revenue Code Section 2056 is generally unavailable unless the surviving spouse is a U.S. citizen, QDOTs allow deferral of estate tax until distributions of principal or the surviving spouse’s death.

The regulatory framework governing QDOTs, however, has not kept pace with procedural and administrative changes over the past several decades. The newly finalized regulations address this gap.

Key Updates in the Final Regulations

The amendments focus on modernization rather than substantive policy shifts. The most relevant updates include:

·         Valuation Clarifications: The regulations update how the value of QDOT assets is determined, aligning references with current valuation standards and eliminating outdated cross-references that no longer reflect current law or practice.

·         Security Instrument Filing Requirements: Prior rules required certain security arrangements (such as bonds or letters of credit) to be filed with offices or officials that no longer exist or have since been reorganized. The final regulations revise these provisions to reflect current IRS administrative structures and filing procedures.

·         Terminology and Organizational Updates: Numerous references to obsolete IRS titles, forms, and publications have been corrected. This includes updating terminology to align with the current Internal Revenue Manual and organizational structure of the Service.

Practical Implications for Practitioners

While these changes are largely technical, they are not merely cosmetic. Practitioners should take note of several practical considerations:

·         Existing QDOT documents and compliance procedures should be reviewed to ensure consistency with updated filing locations and terminology.

·         Estate administration teams should confirm that any required security instruments are directed to the appropriate, currently designated IRS offices.

·         Template documents, internal checklists, and client-facing materials may require revision to reflect the updated regulatory language.

Why This Matters

For practitioners advising nonresident or noncitizen families, QDOT compliance is highly technical and often scrutinized. Even minor procedural missteps—such as improper filing of a security instrument—can jeopardize deferral treatment.

These updates reduce ambiguity by aligning the regulations with current administrative realities, which should, in theory, lower the risk of inadvertent noncompliance. However, they also require practitioners to revisit longstanding assumptions embedded in older templates and workflows.

Final Thoughts

T.D. 10050 is a reminder that even well-established areas of the Code can evolve through technical corrections. For firms handling cross-border estate planning, this is an opportune moment to audit QDOT-related procedures and ensure alignment with the updated rules.

Need Estate Tax Advice ?


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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

IRS Targets Abusive CRAT Structures in New Final Regulations (IR-2026-82)

On July 8, 2026, the Treasury Department and IRS issued IR-2026-82 announcing that  it issued final regulations formally identifying certain Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (CRAT) structures as “listed transactions.” This designation significantly raises the compliance stakes for taxpayers and advisors involved in these arrangements, triggering mandatory disclosure requirements and potential penalties.

What the IRS Is Targeting

The regulations focus on transactions that attempt to improperly eliminate or defer recognition of ordinary income and capital gains through a purported CRAT structure.

In the typical fact pattern described by the IRS:

·         A taxpayer contributes appreciated property (often a closely held business interest or business-use assets) to a purported CRAT.

·         The CRAT sells the contributed property, generating significant gain.

·         The trust then uses the proceeds to acquire a single premium immediate annuity (SPIA).

·         The taxpayer claims that annuity distributions are only partially taxable, relying on a misapplication of Sections 72 and 664.

The intended result is a substantial distortion of the CRAT tier system, allowing taxpayers to avoid recognizing the full amount of gain that would otherwise flow out under the four-tier regime of Section 664.

Why the Structure Fails

The IRS takes the position that these transactions fundamentally misapply both:

·         Section 664, which governs the ordering rules for CRAT distributions (ordinary income, capital gains, tax-exempt income, and return of corpus), and

·         Section 72, which applies to annuity contracts but does not override CRAT distribution character rules.

In substance, the SPIA does not “convert” the character of the underlying income inside the CRAT. The trust’s realized gain retains its character and must be distributed accordingly under the statutory tier system.

Listed Transaction Consequences

By designating these arrangements as listed transactions, the IRS imposes strict reporting obligations:

·         Participants must disclose involvement on Form 8886.

·         Material advisors must file Form 8918 and maintain investor lists under Section 6112.

·         Penalties may apply under Sections 6707A, 6707, and 6708 for failure to disclose or maintain required records.

The “substantially similar” standard also expands the reach of these rules beyond the exact fact pattern described.

Practical Implications for Advisors

For practitioners advising high-net-worth clients or closely held business owners, this development reinforces several key points:

·         CRATs remain valid planning tools, but only when structured and operated in strict compliance with Section 664.

·         Any attempt to “wrap” a CRAT around annuity products to alter income character should be treated as high risk.

·         Due diligence on existing CRAT structures is critical, particularly where annuity products are involved.

·         Prior transactions may require review for disclosure obligations or potential exposure.

Example

Consider a taxpayer who contributes a business interest with a  million basis and  million fair market value to a CRAT. After the CRAT sells the asset, it purchases a SPIA and distributes annuity payments to the taxpayer.

Under a proper application of Section 664, distributions should carry out capital gain from the sale. However, in the abusive structure, the taxpayer reports only a portion of each payment as taxable under Section 72—effectively deferring or avoiding recognition of the  million gain. The IRS now explicitly identifies this treatment as improper and reportable.

Final Thoughts

This guidance is part of a broader enforcement trend targeting transactions that exploit technical mismatches between Code provisions. The IRS is signaling that it will continue to challenge structures that attempt to recharacterize income through intermediaries like CRATs.

Taxpayers and advisors should approach any CRAT strategy involving annuities or income “conversion” techniques with heightened scrutiny and ensure full compliance with disclosure rules where applicable.

 Have an IRS Tax Problem?


     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

Marini & Associates, P.A. 


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or
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