Federal
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November 20, 2025
Importers Left With Uncertainty After US-China Trade Truce
U.S. importers have welcomed the latest trade truce with China and the ability to obtain key minerals without new licensing requirements for the next year, but continue to have questions about how commitments in the bilateral agreement will be met and concerns about risks of escalation.
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November 20, 2025
Treasury To Curtail Tax Credits For Unauthorized Immigrants
The U.S. Department of the Treasury plans to propose rules that would bar unauthorized immigrants from receiving popular refundable individual tax credits such as the earned income tax credit, the department announced Thursday.
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November 20, 2025
6th Circ. Urged To Affirm High Bar For Donor Reporting Rule
A libertarian organization urged the Sixth Circuit to affirm a finding that the federal government must meet a relatively high bar before it can force nonprofits to reveal the identities of their donors, saying the standard acknowledges the burden of the disclosures on First Amendment rights.
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November 20, 2025
FBAR Penalty Against Ex-Prof Is Constitutional, Court Says
A former professor must pay the entire nearly $438,000 penalty the Internal Revenue Service assessed against him for his failure to timely disclose foreign bank accounts, a California magistrate judge held, finding the amount is not unconstitutionally excessive and declining to reduce it.
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November 20, 2025
Trump Pardons Nursing Home Owner In $39M Tax Fraud
President Donald Trump granted clemency to a nursing home operator who had been sentenced to three years in prison for a $39 million employment tax fraud scheme involving care centers he owned across the country.
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November 20, 2025
IRS Unveils Interim Rules For Tax Perk For Rural Loan Interest
The IRS released temporary guidance Thursday on a new incentive that would exclude from taxable income 25% of interest from loans secured by a rural or agricultural property, including the definition of an eligible loan and the determination of the property's fair market value.
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November 19, 2025
Judge Unlikely To Find Eaton's Debt To Parent Wasn't Real
A U.S. Tax Court judge said Wednesday that he's unlikely to find that the intercompany debt U.S.-based Eaton Inc. owed its Irish parent was unreal and should be recharacterized as equity, all but dismissing an alternative argument raised by the Internal Revenue Service.
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November 19, 2025
Senate GOP Resists Extending Expanded ACA Tax Premiums
Senate Finance Committee Democrats on Wednesday urged their Republican counterparts to extend the enhanced tax credits for the Affordable Care Act, which is set to expire at the end of the year, but Republicans said they were looking for other options to address rising healthcare costs.
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November 19, 2025
Tax Court Upholds Rejection Of Tax Tipster's Award
The IRS did not improperly reject a man's claim to a whistleblower award for tips he claimed helped the agency collect money from a foreign financial institution that he said held secret accounts for U.S. citizens, the U.S. Tax Court said Wednesday.
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November 19, 2025
$24M Tax Case Against Couple Tossed For Missing Deadline
The federal government's effort to collect on what it claimed was a couple's $24 million tax bill came too late, a North Carolina federal judge ruled, saying the U.S. didn't show why a 10-year collections deadline should be extended.
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November 19, 2025
Tax Court Substance Ruling Offers Silver Lining For Taxpayers
Even though the U.S. Tax Court upheld stiff penalties under the economic substance doctrine against an eye doctor's microcaptive arrangements, the opinion generally favored taxpayers by clarifying that the IRS faces limits on when it can invoke the doctrine to audit transactions.
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November 19, 2025
Doctor, Husband Admit $16M Healthcare Fraud, Tax Evasion
A physician and her husband admitted to committing more than $16 million in healthcare fraud and tax evasion as part of a scheme that injected sick patients with the wrong medications or dosages, according to their plea agreements in Alaska federal court.
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November 19, 2025
OECD Releases Model Tax Treaty Updates For Amount B
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development released updates Wednesday to its model bilateral tax treaty, including language that incorporates a simplified transfer pricing approach under an international tax framework known as Amount B.
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November 19, 2025
Trump's Global Tariffs Curtailed Trade, Data Shows
U.S. imports dropped by 5.1% in August, the month when many of President Donald Trump's global tariffs took effect, according to data released Wednesday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
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November 18, 2025
Conn. Tobacco Wholesaler Gets Prison Time For $1.2M Fraud
A Connecticut-based tobacco wholesaler who admitted defrauding the state out of $1.2 million in tax revenue was sentenced Tuesday to nearly two years in federal prison.
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November 18, 2025
Shutdown Puts '26 Filing Season In Danger, Ex-IRS Chiefs Say
The longest government shutdown in U.S. history likely disrupted critical Internal Revenue Service preparation for the 2026 filing season and could force the agency to delay opening day, slow refund processing and deliver poor basic taxpayer services, three former IRS commissioners warned Tuesday.
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November 18, 2025
US Asks To Join Cruise Industry's Challenge To Hawaii Tax
The federal government should be allowed to join a cruise industry trade group's case against the state of Hawaii and several counties over the extension of a transient occupancy tax to cruise passengers, the U.S. Department of Justice told a Hawaii federal court.
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November 18, 2025
Electrician's Payment To Ex Is Not Alimony, Tax Court Says
A former electrician's $50,000 check to his ex-wife does not qualify as alimony because he was on the hook to make the payment even if she died, the U.S. Tax Court said Tuesday in deciding that the man cannot deduct the amount.
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November 18, 2025
Judge Details Reasons For Goldstein's Pretrial Motion Losses
A Maryland federal judge explained in further detail Tuesday her decision against SCOTUSblog co-founder Tom Goldstein on several motions seeking to trim his tax evasion case as it heads to trial next year.
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November 18, 2025
Malawi Reiterates Bid For Gem Export Tax Investigation
Malawi has bolstered its bid for a Washington federal judge to reconsider his decision barring the country from pursing discovery against a gemstone company that partnered with a mining outfit the country claims dodged billions of dollars in taxes and export royalties.
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November 18, 2025
Senator Probes College Sports Revenue's Tax-Exempt Status
A Senate Finance Committee Democrat has requested that the Joint Committee on Taxation provide information to help lawmakers analyze the implications of maintaining the tax-exempt status of revenue from college sports.
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November 18, 2025
Tax Return Preparer Gets 18 Months For $25 Million Fraud
A California tax return preparer who admitted he participated in a scheme that claimed $25 million in false refunds was sentenced to 18 months in prison by a California federal court, the U.S. Department of Justice said.
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November 18, 2025
Checklist Could Help Simplify Global Tax Policy, OECD Says
A checklist of questions for global tax policymakers could help simplify the outcomes of their work, the OECD said in a Tuesday report to the Group of 20 nations.
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November 17, 2025
Judge Questions Eaton's Role In Lowered Credit Rating
Tax Court Judge Albert Lauber questioned an expert for Eaton on Monday about how he arrived at a lowered credit rating for the U.S. company in a report he prepared in January 2013, shortly after it acquired an Irish-based global electrical products manufacturer and inverted.
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November 17, 2025
Atty 'Misplaced' Trust In Par Funding Promoter, Panel Hears
A former Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott LLC attorney accused of ethical violations related to promoting the Par Funding merchant cash advance business told a Pennsylvania disciplinary panel Monday that all he did was zealously represent his client, who pitched the ill-fated enterprise to potential investors.
Expert Analysis
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A Look At A Possible Corporate Transparency Act Exemption
Attorneys at Kirkland offer a deep dive into the application of the Corporate Transparency Act's reporting requirements specifically to U.S.-domiciled co-issuers in typical collateralized loan obligation transactions, and consider whether such issuers may be able to assert an exemption from the CTA's reporting requirements.
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Inconsistent Injury-In-Fact Rules Hinder Federal Practice
A recent Third Circuit decision, contradicting a previous ruling about whether consumers of contaminated products have suffered an injury in fact, illustrates the deep confusion this U.S. Supreme Court standard creates among federal judges and practitioners, who deserve a simpler method of determining which cases have federal standing, says Eric Dwoskin at Dwoskin Wasdin.
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In-House Counsel Pointers For Preserving Atty-Client Privilege
Several recent rulings illustrate the challenges in-house counsel can face when attempting to preserve attorney-client privilege, but a few best practices can help safeguard communications and effectively assert the privilege in an increasingly scrutinized corporate environment, says Daniel Garrie at Law & Forensics.
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Emerging Energy Trends Reflect Shifting Political Landscape
As the Trump administration settles in, some emerging energy industry trends, like expanded support for fossil fuel production, are right off of its wish list — while others, like the popularity of Inflation Reduction Act energy tax credits, and bipartisan support for carbon capture, reflect more complex political realities, say attorneys at Greenberg Traurig.
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Tax-Free Ways To Help Employees After The LA Wildfires
Following the recent wildfires in Los Angeles, there are various tax-free ways to give employees the resources and flexibility they need, including simpler methods like disaster relief payments under Internal Revenue Code Section 139 and leave-sharing programs, and others that require more planning, says Ligeia Donis at Baker McKenzie.
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Judge Should Not Have Been Reprimanded For Alito Essay
Senior U.S. District Judge Michael Ponsor's New York Times essay critiquing Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito for potential ethical violations absolutely cannot be construed as conduct prejudicial to the administration of the business of the courts, says Ashley London at the Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Duquesne University.
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Lights, Camera, Ethics? TV Lawyers Tend To Set Bad Example
Though fictional movies and television shows portraying lawyers are fun to watch, Hollywood’s inaccurate depictions of legal ethics can desensitize attorneys to ethics violations and lead real-life clients to believe that good lawyers take a scorched-earth approach, says Nancy Rapoport at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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Accountant-Owned Law Firms Could Blur Ethical Lines
KPMG’s recent application to open a legal practice in Arizona represents the first overture by an accounting firm to take advantage of the state’s relaxed law firm ownership rules, but enforcing and supervising the practice of law by nonattorneys could prove particularly challenging, says Seth Laver at Goldberg Segalla.
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AI Will Soon Transform The E-Discovery Industrial Complex
Todd Itami at Covington discusses how generative artificial intelligence will reshape the current e-discovery paradigm, replacing the blunt instrument of data handling with a laser scalpel of fully integrated enterprise solutions — after first making e-discovery processes technically and legally harder.
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When Innovation Overwhelms The Rule Of Law
In an era where technology is rapidly evolving and artificial intelligence is seemingly everywhere, it’s worth asking if the law — both substantive precedent and procedural rules — can keep up with the light speed of innovation, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
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What Compensation Committees Must Keep In Mind In 2025
New disclosure obligations, an evolving discussion on the analysis of executive perks and updated proxy adviser policies — on top of a new presidential administration — are all important things compensation committees must pay close attention to in 2025, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Anticipating Direction Of Cosmetics Regulation Under Trump
It is unclear how cosmetics regulation reform from the last few years will fare under President Donald Trump, but the new administration's emphasis on deregulation and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s views on product safety provide some insight, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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IRS Basis-Shifting Rule Poses Notable Reporting Obligations
While the IRS’ recently finalized rule requiring partnerships to report certain related-party basis adjustment transactions is narrower than originally proposed, taxpayers and their advisers will still need to comb through myriad transactions to comply, say attorneys at Debevoise.