Thursday, April 30, 2026

Judge in Trump Return Disclosure Damages Mega-Suit Appoints Amicus to Assist the Court on Jurisdictional Issue as to Party Adversity (4/30/26)

I recently wrote on Trump’s suit against the IRS for damages for tax return disclosures. See Could the District Court Invite or Appoint an Amicus to Present the U.S. Position in Trump v. IRS? (2/7/26; 2/12/26), here. The district court (Judge Williams) has appointed amicus curiae to “assist the Court in identifying the applicable law governing an analysis” of the issue she identifies—subject matter jurisdiction where because the parties may not be opposed there may be no case or controversy required for jurisdiction. See order of 4/29/26, CL here (document 43 on the docket sheet, CL here).

In an earlier order on the same day, Judge Williams said “it is unclear to this Court whether the Parties are sufficiently adverse to each other so as to satisfy Article III’s case or controversy  requirement.” Order dated 4/29/26, here (document 41 on the docket sheet), at p. 3. Based on that concern, the Order asks the “the Parties to address the question of subject matter jurisdiction before addressing the relief requested in the Motion.” Order at p.. 4. The Order appointing amicus curiae is apparently based on that concern as to which the response the nominal parties may give could be suspect.

The Order for Amicus assistance is more limited than I suggested in my original blog posting. However, the same concerns could prompt Judge Williams to appoint amicus (either sua sponte or on motion) for other aspects of the case where party adversity may be questionable.

Liberty Global's Tax Scam Fails in Tenth Circuit (4/30/26)

In Liberty Global, Inc. v. United States, ___ F.4th ___ (10th Cir. 2026), CA10 here, GS here, and CL here, using tax lingo and analysis, rejected Liberty Global’s tax scam. The panel majority correctly holds that Liberty Global’s farcical multiple steps did not pass economic substance doctrine (“ESD”) scrutiny.

The key issue upon which the majority of the panel and the dissenting judge differ is over what role, if any, § 7701(o)’s requirement that whether the ESD is “relevant.” § 7701(o)(1) & (o)(5)(C). So that readers can understand the statute’s textual context, I offer it here (with key word in red):

(o) Clarification of economic substance doctrine
    (1) Application of doctrine. In the case of any transaction to which the economic substance doctrine is relevant, such transaction shall be treated as having economic substance only if—
        (A) the transaction changes in a meaningful way (apart from Federal income tax effects) the taxpayer’s economic position, and
        (B) the taxpayer has a substantial purpose (apart from Federal income tax effects) for entering into such transaction.
* * * *
    (5) Definitions and special rules
    For purposes of this subsection—
    * * * *
        (C) Determination of application of doctrine not affected. The determination of whether the economic substance doctrine is relevant to a transaction shall be made in the same manner as if this subsection had never been enacted.

I have written previously on the issue of the term “relevant” in § 7701(o). The Economic Substance Doctrine ("ESD")--the Common Law and § 7701(o) (Federal Tax Procedure Blog 3/31/26; 4/8/26), here. I believe that ESD as the term is used both in the common law and in § 7701(o) means the same thing, except that § 7701(o) adds some specific rules that apply in applying certain features of the ESD. These specific rules address some taxpayer claims about how those features of the common law ESD work. For example, § 7701(o)(2) & (4) provide rules for applying the ESD requirement that a taxpayer have a non-tax profit potential. Section § 7701(o) rejects certain claims that taxpayers made in prior cases to avoid the ESD. Thus, I think that the threshold inquiry is whether the common law ESD applies (not that it is just relevant, but certainly, if ESD applies, it is relevant for purposes of § 7701(o) because the special rules of § 7701(o) may then apply).

Basically, what I am saying is that the panel majority gets it right and the dissent gets it wrong.

Further on Murrin and Allen and the Unlimited Statute of Limitations for Fraud on the Return (4/30/26)

I read earlier this week an excellent article on Murrin v. Commissioner, 158 F.4th 527 (3d Cir. 2025), here, cert petition pending (see here). Bryan Camp, The New Forever Rule for Record Retention (Tax Notes March 3/25/26), here. Professor Camp is concerned, as he was in filing an amicus brief in Murrin, with the potential application to innocent taxpayers of § 6201(c)(1)’s unlimited statute of limitations for a “false or fraudulent return with the intent to evade tax.” Murrin held that the taxpayer’s fraud is not required and that a return preparer’s fraud would suffice to apply the unlimited statute of limitations for fraud. For further on Murrin, see my post Third Circuit Holds Taxpayer Fraud is not Required for 6501(c)(1) Unlimited Statute of Limitations, Creating Conflict (Federal Tax Procedure Blog 8/18/25; 10/17/25).

In an alarmist mode, Professor Camp concludes his article by stating that, unless the problem of § 6201(c)(1) applying to innocent taxpayers is fixed, “I think we must all advise our clients to keep their records . . . forever.” (Emphasis supplied.) What does forever mean in this context? That's a quibble. Professor Camp is not just content to provide that bottom line from Murrin but repeats his arguments in his amicus brief as to error in Murrin and the predicate tax court opinion in Allen v. Commissioner, 128 T.C. 37 (2007), here.

I encourage those interested in the issue (which I call the Allen issue) to read Professor Camp’s article. I have not recently stepped through the legislative and statutory history he discusses in support of his claims, but my recollection is that I was not then sure that they support his claims. In any event, I am sure that for a long period of time since the early tax law, practitioners, including me, assumed that § 6201(c)(1) required taxpayer fraud. Allen appeared out of the blue, so to speak. But now that, in Justice Kagan's words “we are all textualists now,” if we focus on the text of § 6201(c)(1), there is no textual reading that would limit its scope to taxpayer fraud if the fraud is on the return. In other words, at best regarding Professor Camp's claims, the actual text is ambiguous as to whether the text of § 6201(c)(1) requires the taxpayer's fraud.

Further, on the purpose of § 6201(c)(1), I do not conceive it is as a punishment provision but a recognition that fraud on the return makes discovery by the IRS more difficult. After all, the consequence of the unlimited statute of limitations is that the taxpayer pays the tax the taxpayer owed ab initio. True, the taxpayer may have to pay interest, but tax and interest are not penalties. The taxpayer Professor Camp is concerned about is the truly innocent taxpayer relying on a fraudulent preparer; for such a taxpayer there will be no penalty because (i) § 6662 civil penalty which does not apply with taxpayer reasonable cause (unless, for some § 6662 civil penalties, the reasonable cause exception does not apply which is not likely in an innocent taxpayer context) and (ii) § 6663 civil fraud penalty does not apply unless taxpayer fraud is involved. So, from that perspective, the truly innocent taxpayer suffers no penalty with respect to the fraud on the return; rather, he would just pay the tax and interest that are in the helpful metaphor, his dues for a civilized society.

That’s all I have on the merits of Murrin and Allen. Just a few more comments:

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Interesting points from ABA Tax Online Presentation on Loper Bright (4/29/26)

I just attended online an ABA Tax Section Program titled: “Navigating Tax Guidance in a Post-Loper Bright World.” The ABA page on the program is here. The panel participants were very knowledgeable.

Early in the program, I asked the following question via the Q&A tool:

Under Loper Bright, if, after using all the tools of statutory interpretation, a judge still cannot determine whether the IRS interpretation or the opposing interpretation is the best interpretation (a state of equipoise on the interpretation), what does the judge do? Should the judge flip a coin, consult, his ouija board, follow his own preferred outcome, etc.?

I have asked a similar question in previous ABA programs, but the question was never answered. In today’s program, the question was answered—that is, at least an answer was proffered. I am not sure it is the right answer but it certainly echoed Loper Bright’s reasoning, such as it is.

So what was the answer? Basically, the answer given by the judge on the panel was that, with good statutory interpretation, the judge will always have something to tilt the judge to the best interpretation. (That is my paraphrasing and advanced apologies if I did not get it exactly right.) Actually, as the question was answered, I think the answer was hedged saying that he did not think it would happen very often (although that is from memory, I may be misremembering, and my notes don’t confirm that).

I think the essence of the answer was an echo of Loper Bright which is just flat-out wrong on the point of continuing possibility of ambiguity (equipoise). Loper Bright claimed by fiat that a judge should always be able to reach a single best interpretation with no need for a default rule such as Chevron deference to the agency interpretation. (For this, one must remember that a condition of Chevron deference was that the statute be ambiguous, meaning that the judge could not determine whether the agency interpretation or an opposing interpretation was the single best interpretation; if the court could determine the best interpretation, Chevron required the court to stop at Step One without any deference.)

Saturday, April 18, 2026

District Court Invalidates and Vacates Listed Transaction Reporting Regulation (4/18/26)

In Drake Plastics Ltd. Co. v. IRS, ___ F. Supp. 3d ___ (S.D. Tex. 4/15/26), CL here, and GS here [to come], the court (Judge Lee Rosenthal) considered APA claims of invalidity of the regulations determinations of “transactions of interest” and “listed transactions” for micro-captive insurance companies (from the conclusion):

          The court grants in part the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and a permanent injunction, (Docket Entry No. 58), and grants in part the defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment, (Docket Entry No. 63). The defendants (1) appropriately designated micro-captive transactions as transactions of interest through 26 C.F.R. § 1.6011-11; but (2) exceeded their statutory authority in designating micro-captive transactions as listed transactions through 26 C.F.R. § 1.6011-10. The court declares unlawful 26 C.F.R. § 1.6011-10 and vacates it. The case is remanded to the Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service for further agency action consistent with this opinion.

          The vacatur is stayed until May 1, 2026, to avoid taxpayer confusion on Tax Day. Cf. Purcell v. Gonzalez, 549 U.S. 1, 4–5 (2006) (“Court orders . . . can themselves result in . . . confusion . . . .”). Final judgment is entered separately.

I am not sure what the last paragraph stay is about, but I do understand the holdings in the first paragraph.

The court’s holding turns upon interpretation of the statutory requirement that "transactions of interest" have the “potential” for tax avoidance but that “listed transactions” that have tax avoidance, at least presumptive tax avoidance, rather than just the potential for tax avoidance. The court reasoned that the IRS did not adequately explain microcaptive arrangements identified in the "listed transaction" regulation.

Judge Rosenthal is a very good judge, so I respect her analysis, even though I am not convinced that it is correct.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Microsoft Copilot AI Hallucinates on Chevron Deference (4/12/26)

I have previously written on artificial intelligence (“AI”) related to tax procedure issues. I write today to address AI hallucinations of the type that have been incorporated into briefs and, more rarely, even court opinions. By hallucinations, I mean (from Wikipedia, here): “a response generated by AI that contains false or misleading information presented as fact.” The specific instance I address here is false readings of judicial opinions in the context of Chevron deference.

Readers will recall that I have previously discussed the issue of Chevron deference and the demise of Chevron deference in Loper Bright. One of the issues I addressed but return to today is whether courts determined the best interpretation was an interpretation other than an agency interpretation but nevertheless deferred under Chevron to the agency not-best interpretation. My claim was that Chevron required statutory ambiguity which meant that the court could not determine the best interpretation; only when ambiguity existed could the court defer to (apply) the agency interpretation. Stated otherwise, if a court could determine the best interpretation, the statute was not ambiguous and the best interpretation applied at Chevron Step One (i.e., no deference to the agency interpretation). Extended, the claim is that courts did not defer to an agency interpretation when it was not the best interpretation; rather, courts only deferred when they could not determine the best interpretation. At least that is how Chevron should have worked.

Yesterday, I returned to AI, specifically MS Copilot, to address this issue. I link here for download an pdf from an MS Word file with my prompts (4 prompts with prompts 2-4 following through on the first prompt). I provide here prompts 1-4 which refine the inquiry and provide the Copilot response only to the final prompt:

PROMPT #1: can you please identify cases decided under Chevron in which a court explicitly stated its best interpretation and said that it was nevertheless deferring to a not-best agency interpretation?

PROMPT #2 Please provide direct quotations from each case.

PROMPT #3: Please provide pinpoint citations for each case. [JAT Note: pinpoint citations are local page cites.]

PROMPT #4: Please provide cases and quotes from cases where judges criticized Chevron for forcing them to accept worse interpretations.

I will copy and paste the answer to Prompt #4, but first a big red flag was presented in the response to PROMPT #2 when I asked for direct quotes. The response started with the following:

I can absolutely give you direct quotations, but there’s one important constraint: I can only quote one or two lines verbatim from each case, because judicial opinions are copyrighted. 

That claim is patently wrong. Case opinions are not copyrighted.

The following is Copilot's response to PROMPT #4 (I add some of my analysis in CAPS and RED TYPE with links to the cases):

COPILOT RESPONSE TO PROMPT #4:

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Tax Court Sustains Deficiencies Equaling Restitution with No RBA (4/4/26)

In Thody v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2026-30, the Court sustained the deficiencies asserted against Thody with respect to the tax loss that had been subject to a restitution order against Thody in an earlier criminal tax prosecution. The Thody opinion can be viewed at TC No. 27415-21, here, at #50 dated 3/30/26 and GS here. Actually, the original notices of deficiency exceeded the amount in the restitution order, but the IRS conceded (pp.. 4-5) the excess deficiencies asserted in the notice of deficiency, so that with that concession, the amounts of deficiencies the IRS asserted in the case equaled the amounts in the criminal restitution order. The Court then sustained the deficiencies based on the evidence.

One unexplained apparent oddity is that the IRS did not make a restitution-based assessment (“RBA”) allowed by § 6201(a)(4). The Court offers no explanation and treats the case as a straight-forward deficiency case permitting Thody to contest the amounts. If the IRS had made the RBA in the same amounts, Thody could not have contested the amounts of the RBA. In that regard, the IRS can assert deficiencies in amounts exceeding the amounts of restitution, whether or not asserted in an RBA. I don’t know why the IRS conceded the excess amounts. The IRS may have known or believed that it could not sustain that excess, so that this would be a normal concession in a deficiency case. But, if as a straight deficiency case, the IRS could have sustained the excess deficiency amounts, there was no reason to concede them. The IRS may have conceded just to move the case to a prompt decision with less hassle. A related question is whether, once the IRS decided to concede the excess before the trial level consideration was concluded, the IRS could have made an immediate RBA which would preclude Thody from contesting the amounts. I am not sure that there is a statute of limitations on RBAs because I have not researched that issue. And I am not sure that the Court would have treated such a belated RBA as mooting the deficiencies case.

Moreover, the Court seems not to have not the distinction between a tax deficiency and restitution. Thus, at p. 3, the Court says that the Government reduced the restitution (not the RBA) to judgment. In doing so, the Court cites in fn. 4 the IRM for the purpose of suits to reduce tax claims to judgment is to extend the statute of limitations. The IRM provision, I think, relates to tax assessments rather than criminal restitution. Of course, if there is a statute of limitations on restitution (likely), the reason to reduce restitution to judgment may be for the same.

Thody made the argument that the payments he had made for restitution should reduce the amount of the deficiencies. The Court (pp. 7-8) did correctly find that Thody’s argument was incorrect. The Court notes that, although in collecting on any resulting deficiencies approved by the Tax Court, the IRS would have to credit the restitution payments against the tax liabilities.

This blog content is cross-posted on the Federal Tax Crimes Blog here.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Court Denies Charity's Motion to Dismiss a Suit to Judicially Extinguish a Conservation Easement Deduction Failing to Achieve a Tax Deduction (4/2/26)

Today’s entry arises from an order in a case where the Petitioner, as successor in interest to three LLCs that made so-called charitable contributions of conservation easements that failed to sustain the tax benefits the predecessors claimed on the partnership tax returns, seeks a “judicial extinguishment” of the original contribution on the notion that the parties made a critical mutual mistake regarding the easement contributions as qualifying for the federal income tax deduction. If achieved that would mean that the conservation easement goes back to the successor in interest, making its fee simple interest more valuable because not subject to the conservation easement. The nondispositive order is McLaws Bay LLC v. National Wild Turkey Federation (S.D. Ga. No. 4:25-cv-00128 (CL here and GS here) Dkt. #24 (CL here) dated 3/30/26). The Respondents filed a motion to dismiss. The order grants and denies in part the motion on the basis that the record is not sufficient to assess the merits of the defense; the case proceeds at this time.

A key paragraph in the order is (bold-face supplied by JAT):

          Petitioner claims that Grantors (Petitioner’s predecessors in interest) and NWTF intended for the conservation easements to qualify as "conservation contributions" under Section 170 of the IRS code, entitling Grantors to tax benefits. (Id. at pp. 34-35; see 26 U.S.C. §170(h)(1).) Each grant references the tax code and provides that the easements are "intended to constitute (i) a ‘qualified conservation contribution’ as that term is defined in Section 170(h)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code." (Doc. 1-2, pp. 34, 52, 89, 126.) Section 5.24 of each easement states that "Grantor represents that he has consulted with an attorney [and] an accountant . . . familiar with Section 170 of the Internal Revenue [Code] for advice related to this Conservation Easement and any potential tax benefits" and that "Grantor warrants and represents that Grantee has made no warranty or representation relating to . . . any entitlement to tax benefits. . . ." (Id. at pp. 35, 80, 117, 154.)

As best I see the case, in broad overview, the Grantors (the predecessor LLCs to the Petitioner, screwed up the contribution and thus failed to meet the tax requirements (probably including a gross overvaluation).

The opinion identifies the predecessor partnerships making the contribution and claiming the deductions as “Dasher’s Bay at Effingham, LLC, River Pointe at Ogeechee, LLC, and River’s Edge Landing, LLC.” The DAWSON information on the LLCs thus named is:

  • Dasher’s Bay at Effingham, LLC: T.C. No. 4078-18, here. The decision at Dkt # 52 dated 1/11/23 denies a charitable deduction of $8,619,000
  • River Pointe at Ogeechee, LLC: No case with this name found on DAWSON.
  • River’s Edge Landing, LLC: No case with this name found on DAWSON.

In any event, the amounts of the disallowed deductions are relevant only, in the one case, to permit a fair inference of at least the possibility of a gross overvaluation.

My reaction—really a guess without digging into the merits—is that, in the final analysis, the court in McLaws will treat McLaws’ claims as bullshit.

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Prominent Convicted Tax Shelter Lawyer Fails on Appeal in CDP Case Involving Restitution Based Assessments (4/1/26)

 I start with a caveat: although this posting is on April 1, sometimes called April Fools Day, this is intended as a serious discussion.

In Daugerdas v. Commissioner, ___ F.4th ___ (7th Cir. 2026), CA7 here and GS here, the Court held that § 6201(a)(4)(A), which authorizes the IRS  to assess and collect restitution awarded in a criminal proceeding for unpaid tax, was a stand-alone collection authority unaffected by the payment schedule the district court imposed for the restitution behind the tax assessment. The assessment is sometimes called “restitution based assessment,” and acronymed to RBA which I use here. The holding seems like a straight-forward holding. But there are some issues lurking in the case that tax procedure enthusiasts may enjoy or at least understand.

First, I offer background worthy of note:

1. Daugerdas, a lawyer, is a notorious promoter of bogus tax shelters who was convicted. The Court says (pp. 2-3, emphasis supplied by JAT):

          In 2013 a federal jury in Manhattan found Daugerdas guilty of one count of conspiracy to defraud the IRS (18 U.S.C. § 371), one count of mail fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1341), four counts of client tax evasion (26 U.S.C. § 7201), and one count of obstructing the internal revenue laws (26 U.S.C. § 7212(a)). His sentence brought with it an obligation to pay restitution of $371,006,397 jointly and severally with his co-conspirators for the tax losses resulting from the fraud perpetrated on the U.S. Treasury. The district court established a schedule of payments requiring Daugerdas to pay 10% of his gross monthly [*3] income starting 30 days after his release from prison. The Second Circuit affirmed Daugerdas’s convictions and sentence. See United States v. Daugerdas, 837 F.3d 212 (2d Cir. 2016).

I have not tried to break down the components of the restitution amount. Specifically, I have not tried to determine whether the restitution relates to Daugerdas’ tax liabilities (he did make a whopping amount of gross income that he likely attempted to shelter with similar bullshit strategies) or includes in whole or in part the liabilities of other persons reporting on the basis of bullshit tax shelters he promoted with legal opinions and related services. I don’t know that the difference makes a difference in terms of the RBA.

I have written on Daugerdas several times on my Federal Tax Crimes Blog, here (the results are initially by relevance but may be sorted by date).

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The Economic Substance Doctrine ("ESD")--the Common Law and § 7701(o) (3/31/26; 4/8/26)

In Royalty Management Ins. Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2026-26 (T.C. No. 3823-19, here, at #338 and GS here), Judge Lauber smacked down another bullshit tax shelter of the microcaptive insurance genre. This opinion is a follow-through from a prior opinion, Royalty Management Ins. Co. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2024-87 (GS here). I refer to the prior case as Royalty Mgmt 1 and the current case as Royalty Mgmt 2.

Royalty Mgmt 2 was required because Judge Lauber deferred resolving in Royalty Mgmt 1 the economic substance doctrine (“ESD”) issues (including the codified ESD in § 7701(o) and the accuracy-related penalty for shelters running afoul of the codified ESD in § 6662(b)(6), (i)). In the meantime, the Tax Court had decided Patel v. Commissioner, 165 T.C. ___, No. 10 (11/12/25), GS here, which I discussed Tax Court in Unanimous Reviewed Opinion Interprets and Applies the Accuracy-Related Economic Substance Penalty (11/12/25), here. In material part, Patel held that the codified ESD doctrine in § 7701(o) has a predicate “relevance” requirement. So, Judge Lauber in Royalty Mgmt 2 applied that requirement as a predicate for finding the petitioner liable for the accuracy-related penalty for lack of economic substance. The kerfuffle over whether § 7701(o) has a predicate requirement and precisely what the requirement is and how it may be applied is not relevant to the main body of this blog, so I will defer here and discuss that alleged predicate requirement in my comments below. I do point persons interested in the issue at Royalty Mgmt 2 at pp. 3-4.

Judge Lauber goes through (pp. 5-9) the standard ESD requirements—objective and subjective tests, both of which on the facts found, the petitioner flunked.

Having flunked the ESD test, petitioner drew the increased accuracy-related penalty in § 6662(b)(6), (i). (See pp. 9-11.)

JAT Comments: