Trump sues the IRS for $10 billion
President Donald Trump, his eldest two sons and the Trump organization have filed a lawsuit against the IRS, seeking at least $10 billion in damages for failing to prevent the leaking of their financial data in 2019 and 2020.
Charles “Chaz” Littlejohn, a former employee of Booz Allen Hamilton, illegally leaked thousands of wealthy clients’ confidential tax filings, including the president’s, to media outlets during those years. Booz Allen contracted with the IRS at the time and the lawsuit alleges that Littlejohn was able to obtain the records because the IRS did not ensure proper security measures were in place.
Littlejohn was convicted of one count of unauthorized disclosure of tax information and is currently serving a five-year sentence in a federal prison.
The Treasury Department also cut ties with the consulting firm earlier this week, cancelling millions in contracts and saying it was also partly responsible for Littlejohn’s crimes. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Booz Allen also “failed to implement adequate safeguards to protect sensitive data” that Littlejohn accessed.
The filing disputes that Trump’s tax documents included “versions of fraud,” as ProPublica reported based on the files it received from Littlejohn, and cites “significant and irreparable harm to the plaintiffs.”
“Defendants have caused plaintiffs reputational and financial harm, public embarrassment, unfairly tarnished their business reputations, portrayed them in a false light, and negatively affected President Trump, and the other plaintiffs’ public standing,” the complaint reads.
The president also filed administrative claims against the Department of Justice in October, seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation for alleged misconduct in the Russia collusion investigation and a later investigation into whether he had improperly retained classified documents after his first term.
Some warn of a conflict of interest in the president suing the government he currently leads.
The lawsuit was filed Thursday in a federal Florida court.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Pritzker ‘absolutely, foursquare opposed’ to Chicago mayor’s head tax
Illinois quick hits: Elections board splits on Harmon fine; busiest summer at O’Hare
Congressman proposes bipartisan bill to address fentanyl
API now opposes year-round E15 sales, citing shifting, unstable environment for refiners
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to toss stay in National Guard case
GOP candidates: Illinois families struggle while Pritzker wins in Las Vegas
WATCH: Pritzker wants immigration enforcement, just not Trump’s way
Trump tells Dems to ‘stop the madness’ after three weeks of government shutdown
Trump, Putin meeting in Hungary called off
WATCH: Businesses argue Congress holds purse strings in tariff challenge
Report: FEMA under Biden politically discriminated against Americans
Trump begins accepting $100k visa payments