The IRS had a 25-page memo explaining how to beat Trump’s lawsuit — the Justice Department ignored it and gave him $1.8 billion instead.

BREAKING: REVEALED! The IRS had a 25-page memo explaining how to beat Trump’s lawsuit — the Justice Department ignored it and gave him $1.8 billion instead.



The fix was in from the beginning. Now we have the paper trail to prove it.

Career IRS lawyers prepared a detailed 25-page memo outlining multiple strong defenses against Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit — defenses that legal experts say could have gotten the case thrown out entirely.



The Justice Department received it, ignored every word of it, never sent a single lawyer to court to contest Trump’s claims, and instead handed him a $1.776 billion taxpayer-funded slush fund and permanent immunity from IRS audits.



The memo, prepared by career civil servants following standard procedures, identified at least two fatal flaws in Trump’s suit.



First, the statute of limitations: federal law requires IRS lawsuits to be filed within two years of learning about a leak. Trump’s own lawyer, Alina Habba, appeared in court in October 2023 when the leaker pleaded guilty — more than two years before Trump filed his January 2025 complaint.



Second, liability: because the leaker was a Booz Allen Hamilton contractor rather than an IRS employee, the Justice Department had successfully argued in other similar cases that the IRS couldn’t be held responsible.



These were winning arguments. The IRS memo said so. Trump’s own judge, Kathleen Williams, was already circling — she had ordered both sides to explain whether they were actually opposing each other or colluding, and was preparing to dismiss the case herself.



So, Trump pulled the suit before she could rule. The Justice Department — led by Todd Blanche, Trump’s former personal criminal defense attorney — immediately announced the $1.8 billion fund. One day later, Blanche signed a separate one-page document giving Trump, his sons, and all Trump businesses permanent immunity from any IRS audit, past or future.



The Treasury Department’s own general counsel resigned the day the fund was created.

The man who signed the IRS side of the agreement, Frank Bisignano, was never confirmed by the Senate for his IRS role. He’s simultaneously running the Social Security Administration.



Career lawyers wrote the memo. Nobody read it. Nobody appeared in court. The president sued an agency he controls, negotiated a settlement with officials he appointed, dodged a judge who was about to stop him, and walked away with nearly $2 billion in taxpayer money and a lifetime tax amnesty.



This is not how law works. This is how rackets work. This is not how the United States government should work.

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