Yesterday, I posted a blog on the Amici Brief filed in Trump v. IRS, (S.D. Fla. No. 26-cv-20609), CL Docket sheet here. On Amici Brief in Trump and Related Parties Suit for Damages from Unauthorized Inspections and Disclosures of Return Information by Employee of IRS Contractor (2/6/26), here. Basically, a principal theme of the Amici Brief is that the Trump plaintiffs are suing the Government where Trump is also the Government “decider” (to echo George Bush’s claim). That presents some major issues, some of which are discussed in the Amici Brief and I address in the prior blog.
Today, I wanted to expand on an issue that I began considering after posting yesterday’s blog:
Can the district court sua sponte or at the urging of some Amici invite or appoint an Amicus to represent the United States if the United States at Trump’s direction aligns itself with the Trump plaintiffs?
There is precedent that might permit the district court to invite or appoint an Amicus to participate in the proceeding to represent the United States’ interest where the parties are aligned (thus perhaps not creating a case or controversy). The precedent is Bob Jones University v. United States, 461 U.S. 574 (1983), GS here. In that case, the IRS denied tax-exempt status to two education organizations—Bob Jones and Goldsboro Christian Schools--which allegedly had a "sincerely held" religious belief that their God required them to racially discriminate. The Fourth Circuit sustained the IRS position. In the Supreme Court, the White House directed the SG’s office to disavow the IRS position that had prevailed in the Fourth Circuit. There is intrigue and high drama about the White House doing that, but I offer more on that below in order to stay on track for the main body of this posting. Perceiving that, at that point, the parties were aligned and no one was arguing in support of the Fourth Circuit opinion, the Supreme Court invited William T. Coleman, a prominent D.C. lawyer, to brief and argue the case as Amicus Curiae; the opinion in the case describes Coleman as follows: “William T. Coleman, Jr., pro se, by invitation of the Court, 456 U. S. 922, argued the cause as amicus curiae urging affirmance.” (As in many Supreme Court cases, there were other Amici briefs filed, but Coleman’s was likely the one that the Justices paid most attention to; I have sometimes expressed doubt as to the efficacy of Amici Briefs that often flood the Supreme Court in hot button issue cases where the Amici often just give the same or slight variations of the arguments made by the parties or Amici, often with slightly different wording; Coleman’s was different because the Supreme Court respected him andinvited it.) In the merits decision, the Supreme Court affirmed the Fourth Circuit, thus rejecting the White House’s forced position that put the parties in alignment.
The bottom-line, where in Trump v. IRS the Trump-related parties and the Government (at the direction of Trump) have interests that are or may be aligned, the district court might invite or appoint an Amicus to assist the court in doing justice in the case. The court could do that sua sponte as the Supreme Court did in Bob Jones or it could do it on motion from Amici.