Bloomberg has this article: Michael J. Bologna, Whistleblower Targets Tax Shelter Promoting Do-Good Technology (Bloomberg Tax 3/23/26), here. The only thing I know about the strategy is from the article. I therefore cannot speak to whether it is in fact a bullshit tax shelter. However, if the article accurately describes the strategy, it has the earmarks of bullshit tax shelters—likely gross overvaluation of charitable noncash donations—from Jackie Fine Arts in the 1970s and early 1980s, through a cousin, Barrister, then going through the Syndicated Conservation Easements.
The article appears to be well researched and has some comments by prominent attorneys in this area. Some excerpts:
Working off a playbook refined over several years, Solidaris and its partners in 2025 proposed four separate plans, each investing in 45 shell companies, and each looking to raise $90 million from wealthy investors.
In one plan, the investors could vote to donate license rights to a technology designed to help blind people navigate in urban environments. In the second, they could vote to distribute digital coloring books to pediatric cancer patients. And in the two others, they could choose to donate crime-fighting artificial intelligence technology to local police departments. All four plans were described in private placement documents as Regulation D private offerings, allowing the promoters and sponsors to raise capital without registering the investments with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Elements of the strategy including outsized charitable deductions, complex procedures, and unusually high fees, warrant government scrutiny, according to former Internal Revenue Service, SEC, and Department of Justice officials who reviewed the documents for Bloomberg Tax.
“It undermines fundamental economics and human behavior,” said Miles Fuller, a former senior counsel at the IRS Office of Chief Counsel. “One dollar does not turn into five dollars overnight. And if it did, it is unlikely the beneficial party would then donate the five dollars to charity rather than sell and pocket the profit.”
The Solidaris-led strategy to collect $360 million total from investors last year could generate charitable deductions of $1.8 billion this tax season, assuming high-wealth investors vote to donate the technology and then claim a deduction worth five times their investments. That would cut an estimated $667 million from their federal returns and $90 million from state returns for tax year 2025.
Solidaris says its investments “multiply good on a local, state, and national scale.” It also said it plays no role in whether investors vote to donate the technology. The company has not been charged with any wrongdoing.
Under the Internal Revenue Code, whether a tax shelter is allowed or not can be an open question until the government weighs in. And that can take years, especially when the shelter is novel or complicated.
Just a few comments: