Both President Donald Trump and the IRS are facing fresh challenges as a result of the settlement agreement in his case.
The Justice Department established a $1.776 billion “anti-weaponization fund” and prohibited the IRS from conducting audits against Trump, his family, and associated companies in order to resolve President Donald Trump’s case about his leaked tax returns earlier this week.
It was meant to be the conclusion of a case that sparked concerns about potential conflicts of interest between Trump’s private affairs and his position as president.
Rather, it’s the start of fresh inquiries regarding Trump and the IRS.The tax, administrative law, and constitutional law communities will probably examine and debate this kind of arrangement for years, according to Carolyn Schenck, a lawyer with Caplin & Drysdale and a former senior IRS official.Schenck stated, “I believe the wider ramifications of this settlement, especially in relation to executive authority and the future operation of tax administration, will remain part of the legal and policy conversation for a very long time.”
According to the settlement documents, the United States is “forever barred and precluded” from a number of steps, including audits against Trump. This is applicable to “matters currently pending or that could be pending (including tax returns filed before the effective date).”
The tax returns that an IRS contractor unlawfully exposed to media outlets a number of years ago were the subject of Trump’s lawsuit. In 2023, Charles Littlejohn entered a guilty plea to disclosing tax returns and return information without authorization. According to records, Littlejohn, 41, is scheduled to be freed from prison next year.
Littlejohn exposed other prominent people’s tax returns. Ken Griffin, the CEO of Citadel, filed a lawsuit against the IRS for illegally disclosing his tax records. The IRS formally apologized to Griffin at the conclusion of the case and promised to strengthen data security.
Here, something different is taking place.
Another example of the Trump administration acting in a way that helps the president, whose estimated net worth is $6.5 billion, is the addendum that prohibits future government claims and terminates audits of Trump, his company, and its affiliates.
Other instances include Trump holding stakes in businesses that are profiting from the administration’s actions or accumulating riches through cryptocurrency as his administration promotes the sector. Trump’s predecessors have relied on blind trusts, divestitures, or investments in diversified mutual funds and Treasury bills to limit ethical concerns, but presidents are exempt from conflict-of-interest rules that forbid federal officials from participating in government matters in which they have a financial stake.
It was projected that losing one audit battle would cost Trump over $100 million.
The left-leaning watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington referred to the amendment that terminates audits as “yet another unconstitutional emolument,” citing the federal government’s restriction on presidents receiving further income. Trump’s Department of Justice had stressed earlier this week that he would receive “no monetary payment or damages of any kind” as part of the settlement agreement that ended his $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service over the disclosure of his tax returns.
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Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has signed an addition that permits the attorney general to halt an audit or other investigation of a taxpayer, even if it is illegal for the president or the president’s staff to do so.
According to a statement from Brandon DeBot, policy director of New York University’s Tax Law Center, there are still worries that White House officials were involved in settlement talks. Additionally, according to DeBot, the IRS “would need to act to make the release of claims effective, which could raise additional questions about whether there has been unlawful political interference in the audit process,” and the Department of Justice lacks the authority to provide “extraordinary protections.”DeBot continued, “The settlement and widespread release of claims is an astounding abuse of the tax and legal system.
According to a Justice Department official, as is customary in settlements, the parties forfeited the opportunity to dispute a number of issues. The representative further stated that the agreement only covers current audits and not any upcoming ones. Requests for comment were not answered by the Treasury Department or the IRS.It was such an amazing moment.
Professor Natasha Sarin of Yale University’s law department and co-founder of the Budget Lab at Yale also criticized the settlement as a whole and the addendum that terminates audits, calling it unprecedented.Sarin, a former Treasury Department lawyer under the Biden administration, stated, “It’s kind of a stunning moment in our nation’s history, and one that I worry is quite problematic from the perspective of our democracy and its norms.”
Tax lawyer Dave Kautter, who worked as an assistant Treasury secretary for tax policy and acting IRS commissioner during the first Trump administration, said he wasn’t incensed by the settlement deal and its addition. “I will say in my experience it is a unique arrangement, and it’s just something I’ve never seen before,” Kautter said to MarketWatch.
According to Kautter, who compared the agreement to a contract between the president and the federal government, it might be challenging to bring a judicial challenge to the settlement and its addition. “Generally in a contract, the parties to the contract are the only parties that can challenge the terms of the contract,” he stated.
A challenge could be challenging, according to several legal experts. According to an analysis provided by NYU’s Tax Law Center, a party can only contest a government action that results in a loss of tax income if they can demonstrate that they experienced personal harm that other taxpayers did not.
The “anti-weaponization fund” seems to have a broad scope and might provide a means of payment for rioters that Trump pardoned for their acts on January 6, 2021. Two police officers who assisted in defending the U.S. Capitol on that day have so far filed a lawsuit to prevent payouts from the $1.776 billion fund created by the settlement.
A more compact IRS
According to Schenck, it could be too soon to say whether the Trump agreement will have long-term effects on IRS white-collar enforcement.
According to her, lawyers who are attempting to predict the IRS’s next course of action typically look for broad clues. This involves “how agencies allocate resources, the types of cases emphasized, how aggressively certain theories are pursued, and how the government frames its enforcement mission publicly.”
However, the indications thus far point to an IRS that is reducing high-end enforcement at a time when it was beginning to increase it. According to a research by IRS national taxpayer advocate Erin Collins, the agency’s head count was 27% lower in December 2025 than it was in January.
Democrats claim that the tax agency is being completely destroyed as a result of a staffing boom during the Biden administration in an effort to enhance customer service and increase revenue from affluent households. Many Republicans believe that the cuts are right-sizing the ranks. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, for example, recently stated that there was “quite a bit of bloat during the Biden years.”
In any case, the effects of a reduced enforcement force are becoming apparent. Examples can be found in reports from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.
For example, taxpayers who have offshore bank accounts are subject to reporting requirements and owe the IRS. The watchdog reported last month that the section that reviews taxes for large corporations and foreign taxpayers has lost about 750 revenue agents due to the long-standing problem of nonfiling. According to the report, that will probably have an effect on the battle against noncompliance in the future.
The Treasury watchdog stated in a March report that, following a staff reduction, the IRS was reconsidering its audit coverage objectives for large partnerships.
Prior to Frank Bisignano, commissioner of the Social Security Administration, being appointed CEO of the IRS, there was also a roller coaster of leadership changes. One of the federal officials who signed the court settlement that established the anti-weaponization fund was Bisignano.
Bisignano stated during a Senate hearing last month that he was dedicated to collecting taxes and that he could manage the workload with fewer staff members. “We’ve brought in a ton of technology,” Bisignano remarked.
The IRS’s capacity to collect money owing has been harmed by staff reductions, according to Vermont Democrat Senator Peter Welch. “You must collect a significant amount of money from those who owe it. Not a lot of technology.

