Key Takeaways
- Trump sues Trump Treasury and Trump IRS over leaks in first Trump Administration.
- "Enormous conflict of interest."
- Lawsuit backlash.
- Another shutdown: IRS funded for this week.
- Tax season, Week 1, and its discontents.
- Large Minnesota auto dealer accused of crimes involving Montana LLCs.
- Groundhog Day, Tater Tot Day.
Trump sues IRS and Treasury for $10 billion over leaked tax info - Fatima Hussein, Associated Press:
The suit, filed in a Florida federal court Thursday, includes the president’s sons Eric Trump and, Donald Trump Jr. and the Trump organization as plaintiffs.
The filing alleges that the leak of Trump and the Trump Organization’s confidential tax records caused “reputational and financial harm, public embarrassment, unfairly tarnished their business reputations, portrayed them in a false light, and negatively affected President Trump, and the other Plaintiffs’ public standing.”
Donald Trump was President, and therefore in charge of the IRS and Treasury, at the time of the leaks.
Trump Lawsuit Against IRS Puts Him on Both Sides of the Same Case - Richard Rubin, Ryan Barber and Annie Linskey, Wall Street Journal:
The unusual dynamics are intensified by Trump’s expansive view of executive authority and his history of leveraging the presidency’s unique powers to secure settlements from private parties, said Peter Keisler, who served as acting attorney general in the George W. Bush administration.
“This creates the risk of the most collusive lawsuit of all time, because it is ultimately the president suing a defendant whom he says has to do whatever he directs,” Keisler said.
Trump’s Lawsuit Against I.R.S. Creates ‘Enormous Conflict of Interest’ - Andrew Duehren, New York Times:
“It’s not a crazy lawsuit,” said Michael Eric Herz, a professor at Cardozo Law School. “It should be taken seriously and if it was anyone other than the president bringing the lawsuit you would say, ‘I can understand this.’”
Related: Eide Bailly IRS Dispute Resolution and Collections Services.
The Politics of the Lawsuit
Trump’s $10 Billion Lawsuit Against the IRS Provokes Backlash - Tyrah Burris, Tax Notes ($):
...
“While Trump is weaponizing taxpayer privacy laws for his own benefit, his Treasury Department is flouting those exact same laws to send tens of thousands of individual tax records to his anti-immigrant henchmen at ICE. It is the height of hypocrisy for Trump to pretend he cares one bit about taxpayer privacy,” Wyden said in his statement.
Senate Republican says his ‘preference’ is for IRS to investigate who leaked Trump’s tax returns instead of lawsuit - Max Rego, The Hill:
“I don’t doubt the federal government deserves to be sued. The problem is, we don’t have $10 billion. My preference would be to do a robust investigation, find out who leaked those tax returns,” Johnson told host Dana Bash on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
Democrats Pressure IRS for More Info on ICE Taxpayer Requests - Erin Slowey, Bloomberg ($):
...
“These arrangements raise serious questions about the IRS’s compliance with the confidentiality rules in Internal Revenue Code,” the letter said.
The Slow-Motion Shutdown and the IRS
Today could be bumpy in the House - Jake Sherman and John Bresnahan, Punchbowl News:
The Senate on Friday night passed both the five-bill funding package and a separate two-week Homeland Security stopgap funding bill. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer cut a deal with the White House to pass the short-term DHS stopgap so Congress can work on an ICE-reform package through Feb. 13.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries wasn’t a party to that deal. That means Speaker Mike Johnson may be forced to try to pass the funding package with just GOP votes, something that hasn’t gone very well this Congress.
IRS will stay fully staffed for first five 5 days of shutdown - Martha Waggoner, The Tax Adviser:
The IRS will use money from the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, P.L. 117-169, to remain fully staffed from Saturday through Feb. 7, the plan said. The plan also includes totals of staff who are designated as exempt and would be retained in case of a lapse shutdown.
Divided House stretches shutdown - Eleanor Mueller, Semafor:
Capitol Hill Recap: Hope for Healthcare Credit Enhancements - Alex Parker, Eide Bailly:
But there were some signs of life this week, after Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, outlined what he said was a proposal to the other side that he thought could bridge the divide.
Filing Season, One Week In.
Tax Breaks: The Tax Filing Season, But Throw In A Shutdown Edition - Kelly Phillips Erb, Forbes:
Why This Tax Season Is Likely to be Slow and Agonizing for All - Russ Fox, Taxable Talk:
What’s the result going to be from this? Fewer taxpayers are going to get cases resolved, more taxpayers will need to go to Congressional liaisons (which will also decrease normal TAS cases), and both taxpayers and practitioners will be frustrated.
Tax season will likely be fine if you file a return with no mistakes. Any mistakes or discrepancies could send your tax refund into the abyss. Some tips to help things go smoothly:
- Don't rush. Make sure you have all of your W-2s, 1099s, K-1s, 1098s, and other information returns before filing.
- Make sure your return has your current banking information. If you don't have banking information, you set back your refund by at least six weeks. If you have the wrong banking information, your return goes into the abyss.
- If you have been claiming dependents on your return, be sure that they aren't filing their own returns as non-dependents. The e-filing system will catch this and delay the processing of your return.
- E-file. The IRS struggles with paper and the postal system's reliability isn't great either.
- Double-check your estimated tax payments. An individual online account is a great tool for this.
The Filing Season: How to Get Assistance - Erin Collins, NTA Blog:
The Minnesota - Montana Car Plate Caper
Minnesota Auto Dealer Allegedly Used Montana LLCs to Evade Taxes - Michael Bologna, Bloomberg ($):
...
Vehicle registrations facilitated through the so-called Montana loophole have become a major tax avoidance problem for revenue departments in many other states. Montana has no statewide sales tax and very low vehicle registration and renewal fees, attracting thousands of non-Montana residents and out-of-state dealers to plate vehicles in the Big Sky state each year.
Avoiding vehicle taxes though the use of Montana LLCs is a focus area for non-Montana revenue departments, with some states enacting special rules to attach Montana registration of in-state vehicles.
Non-paywalled coverage here.
Claims Court Snuffs Cannabis Dealer's ERC Bid
Claims Court Harshes Pot Shop’s Employee Retention Credit Refund - Nathan Richman, Tax Notes ($):
In her January 30 opinion dismissing Gravenstein 116 LLC v. United States, Judge Eleni M. Roumel of the Court of Federal Claims wrote that the ERC — including its refundable portion — is unambiguously a tax credit under the Internal Revenue Code. “The Code unequivocally labels the ERC as ‘a credit.’ . . . The Code describes the refundable portion of the ERC as one part of this ‘credit,’” she wrote.
Related: What to Know About the Employee Retention Credit.
Blogs and Bits
Don't overlook the EITC, a valuable tax credit that could get you a tax refund - Kay Bell, Don't Mess With Taxes. "The tax credit was created to help taxpayers who work, but don’t make a lot. That means you must have a job, but your wages or salary can’t be too much. If you have children, they must meet EITC eligibility requirements. There also are age limits."
Your Overtime Deduction Questions Answered - Thomas Gorczynski, Tom Talks Taxes. "In addition, the deduction amount is only the premium portion, which is the amount exceeding the regular rate of pay (i.e., the “half” in “time-and-a-half)."
Fifth Circuit Reverses Tax Court; Rejects Self-Employment Tax "Passive Investor" Rule - Parker Tax Pro Library. "In so holding, it rejected the IRS's "passive investor" rule that requires a functional analysis of a limited partner's role in the partnership, and which the Tax Court previously approved in Soroban Capital Partners LP v. Comm'r, 161 T.C. No. 12 (2023)."
Related: Fifth Circuit Rules on Self Employment Tax Exception.
IRS Under Bisignano: Is More Aggressive Offshore Enforcement Coming? - Virginia La Torre Jeker, Forbes. "For U.S. citizens and green-card holders living overseas, U.S. tax obligations are complicated. They follow the taxpayer, regardless of residence."
Related: Eide Bailly Global Mobility Services.
When Financial Plans Go Awry
Financial planner who did not file tax returns or pay income tax on nearly $1,500,000 in income sentenced to federal prison - IRS (Defendant name omitted, emphasis added):
Defendant, from Marion, Iowa, received the prison term after a July 22, 2025, guilty plea to two counts of failure to file a tax return.
In a plea agreement, Defendant admitted that he did not file a tax return from 2006 to 2012. After being contacted by tax authorities in 2013, Defendant filed delinquent returns for those years and a tax return for 2013. However, he did not pay the income tax he owed for 2008 through 2013.
That wasn't a great idea, but he had worse ones:
The first rule of holes is to stop digging.
For a financial planner, this seems like poor planning. I hope his planning worked out better for his clients.
What day is it?
It's Groundhog Day, of course, but if you choose to observe National Tater Tot Day instead, I understand.
Make a habit of sustained success.

