I assume that most readers of this blog will already have
seen news about Trump’s suit against the IRS for “damages” arising from the
disclosure of his tax return information by an employee of an IRS contractor
who was subsequently criminally convicted by plea agreement and sentenced to
five years’ incarceration. E.g., Trump sues IRS and Treasury for $10 billion
over leaked tax information (NPR
1/30/26), here.
The suit is titled Trump v. IRS (S.D. Fla. No. 26-cv-20609), CL Docket
sheet here.
(Reminder: Access to the Court Listener docket sheet is free and will have
links to the documents provided that some CL member has downloaded them from
PACER.)
The key documents to date are
• the complaint (CL here)
and
• a new Amici Curiae Motion for Leave to File Brief as
Amici Curiae by Former Government Officials and Public Interest Organizations,
here.
The interests of the Amici are (Br 1-2, footnote omitted):
Amici are
four former government officials with combined decades of experience in federal
tax law, each of whom joins this brief only in their personal capacity, and two
public-interest organizations. They have sought leave to submit this brief to
aid the Court in its management of this important case.
John Koskinen served as the 48th
Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service. He was confirmed to the position
by the Senate in 2013, and he served in the position until 2017. Prior to his
service as IRS Commissioner, he served in a number of positions in the public
and private sector, including as the non-executive chairman of the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) from 2008 to 2012.
Kathryn Keneally served as the
Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Department of Justice’s Tax Division.
She was confirmed to the position by the Senate in 2012, and she served in the
position until 2014. Prior to her service in the Department of Justice, she
practiced tax law in private practice for thirty years and served as chair of
the American Bar Association’s Section of Taxation’s Committees on Civil and
Criminal Tax Penalties and Standards of Tax Practice.
Nina Olson served as the National
Taxpayer Advocate from 2001 to 2019. In that role, she led the Taxpayer
Advocate Service, an independent organization within the Internal Revenue
Service. Prior to serving in that role, she had over two decades of experience
representing individual taxpayers at all levels of income.
Gilbert Rothenberg served as the Chief
of the U.S. Department of Justice, Tax Division, Appellate Section. He joined
the Department as a line attorney in the Appellate Section in 1975 and served
in the Section until his retirement in 2019.
Common Cause is a nonpartisan,
grassroots organization dedicated to upholding the core values of American
democracy by working to create open, honest, and accountable government that
serves the public interest. Common Cause has over 1.5 million members
nationwide and local organizations in 23 states.
Project On Government Oversight (POGO)
is a nonpartisan, independent watchdog that investigates, exposes, and
champions reforms on systemic corruption, abuse of power, and waste. [*2] POGO envisions a federal
government that is effective and accountable—governed by just laws, operating
with integrity, and committed to serving the public. Government ethics and
public trust in the federal government are at the heart of POGO’s mission.
I will not write on the merits of the Complaint. I will
editorially comment that, in my opinion, this is just another Trump attempt to
monetize Trump’s presidency which has already unlocked mega-millions for Trump and
his family (not to mention his “friends,” such as pardon attorneys close to him).
Rather, I address in this blog the Amici Brief.
The judge on the case is Kathleen M. Williams, an Obama
appointee. See Wikipedia here. Pretrial
responsibilities have been assigned to Magistrate Judge Enjolique A. Lett. I
could find no current information on her in a quick Google search; I did find,
for example, that Judge Roy K. Altman assigned her to handle pretrial
non-dispositive matters in The Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust v. Capital
One, N.A. (S.D. Fla. 1:25-cv-21596), here.
(This suit against Capital One asserts a “de-banking” claim that appears to be another classic Trump case to monetize his
presidency; although Trump does not directly control both sides, he can control
the levers of power by directing Government action, directly or indirectly,
against the defendant; tongue-in-cheek, maybe Trump and the related parties
will give up the suit if Capital One names its corporate headquarters the Trump
Building or even the name of the organization as Trump Bank.)
Points about the Amici Brief: