The IRS will never audit Donald Trump’s old tax returns again. That chapter is officially closed for good.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche signed an order Tuesday permanently ending any IRS examination of Trump’s prior tax filings and shutting down all existing claims tied to Trump, his family, and his businesses for anything filed before the May 18 settlement date. There is no sunset clause, no reopening mechanism, and no ambiguity about what the order covers.
The agreement stems from the lawsuit Trump filed earlier this year against the IRS after former contractor Charles Littlejohn illegally accessed and leaked Trump’s confidential tax records to the media during Trump’s first term in office. Trump initially sought $10 billion in damages, arguing the leak represented a politically motivated abuse of government power and a catastrophic breach of taxpayer confidentiality.
Littlejohn eventually pleaded guilty and received a five-year prison sentence, but the damage was already done. He did not accidentally stumble across the records or leak them impulsively. Prosecutors said he deliberately accessed and distributed sensitive tax information involving Trump and other wealthy Americans to media outlets. Those leaks fueled years of stories about Trump’s finances while he was actively running for reelection.
For many conservatives, the issue was never just about tax returns. It was about the federal government’s willingness to tolerate politically damaging leaks when the target happened to be Donald Trump.
The IRS exists in part to safeguard taxpayer information. Americans are required by law to hand over deeply personal financial details with the expectation that the government will protect that data. In this case, that protection failed spectacularly. Critics argue the agency’s response at the time was slow, passive, and lacking urgency, considering the seriousness of the breach.
As part of the settlement, Trump and his sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, dropped the lawsuit. There was no financial payout attached to the deal, but the government issued a formal apology, something that carries significant weight given how aggressively the allegations were dismissed when they first surfaced.
At the same time, the Department of Justice announced the creation of a $1.776 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund designed to compensate Americans who believe they were politically targeted or unfairly investigated by prior administrations. Blanche framed the initiative as an effort to restore trust in institutions that many Americans now believe have been politicized.
“The machinery of government should never be weaponized against any American,” Blanche said Tuesday while announcing the program.
Democrats immediately blasted the move. Senator Jack Reed called Blanche “the president’s consigliere” and accused the administration of creating a self-serving arrangement in which Trump appointees effectively control both sides of the process. Others warned the fund could eventually become a financial backstop for Jan. 6 defendants or Trump allies claiming political persecution.
Former IRS officials also raised eyebrows over the permanent audit waiver. Danny Werfel, who served as IRS commissioner under Biden, said nothing like it exists in modern agency history. Former Obama-era IRS Commissioner John Koskinen estimated that a prolonged audit battle over Trump’s tax liabilities could have exposed him to as much as $100 million in additional tax obligations.
That figure alone explains why critics see the agreement as extraordinary.
Still, many Americans notice the double standard surrounding the reaction. The same political figures now expressing outrage over the settlement were largely silent when a federal contractor illegally leaked a sitting president’s private financial records to reporters. At the time, concerns about government weaponization were often mocked as paranoia or political theater.
Now there is a criminal conviction, a formal government apology, a multibillion-dollar compensation fund, and a legally binding order permanently ending IRS scrutiny of Trump’s old returns.
That sequence of events makes it much harder to dismiss those earlier concerns as conspiracy theories.














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