by Pa Rock
Citizen Journalist
Sometime in 2019 or 2020 a contracted employee with the IRS illegally released tax returns on 405,000 Americans, one of whom was Donald John Trump. Trump was President at the time and the person ultimately in charge of the government whose procedures, regulations, and hiring practices made that breach of the law possible. The contractor was eventually identified, arrested, tried, and is today serving a prison sentence. But that level of legal vengeance was not enough for Trump, who, as President, knew of a "settlement fund" held within the US Treasury for the payment of court settlements against the United States. The fund had already been approved by Congress, and the Treasury was free to dole out settlements without going back to Congress each time that the US lost a case in Court or chose to settle a case out of court. The fund was, in Trump's eyes, easy pickings.
A few months ago Trump brought suit against the United States Treasury and Internal Revenue Service for $10 billion over the illegal release of his tax returns which had occurred earlier on his previous watch. Not only had Trump appointed the leaders of those agencies who were on duty during the theft incident that occurred in his first administration, he had also appointed the leaders of those same agencies years later during his second administration. When a judge commented that it sounded like a case of Trump suing himself, Trump and his legal team, fearing the case would be doomed if it went to court, decided to be extremely cute and "settle" the case before it ever got to court. That involved the Justice Department, headed by Trump appointees, negotiating a payment with Trump and his legal team - or Trump settling with himself.
A sweet, sweet deal ensued in which Trump agreed to drop his suit, which he feared would not stand up in court anyway, in exchange for the government setting up a special fund of $1.776 billion to compensate people who had been persecuted by a weaponized government that was out to get them. Trump and his government refused to rule out that the money, which was being referred to as a "slush fund" in the press and would have been administered by people appointed by Trump, could ultimately be used to compensate the traitors and anarchists who had attacked the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.
The public outcry over the proposed fund that would give government money to criminals was swift and loud, and even Republican politicians were feeling the heat of the outrage. A federal judge put the slush fund on hold and ordered that no payments be made for the time being, and the judge also ordered the case be returned to the purview of the court. This week, the acting US Attorney General, a man appointed by Trump who also was once one of Trump's personal lawyers, announced that the deal to fund the weaponization fund was dead. But Trump apparently didn't get the memo and is still "iffy" on the matter.
What Trump is not "iffy" is the other part of the proposed settlement in which Trump, his family members, and his companies, would not have to face any on-going tax audits - or any tax audits in the future. That is still definitely a part of the settlement suit, while Trump's pursuit of the $10 billion of taxpayer money remains unclear at this point.
This Wednesday Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was testifying before the Senate Finance Committee when he was asked if Trump and his family would still get immunity from IRS audits, and Bessent dodged the question.
Last night during a most-of-the night debate in the US Senate over amendments to a bill to fund US immigration enforcement for three more years (at a cost of over $700 billion!) Republican senators voted down a measure that would have permanently blocked Trump's "weaponization" slush fund.
Pa Rock has a couple of questions:
1. 405,000 individuals, many of them very prominent, had their tax records released along with Trump's. Are they all going to demand $10 billion in compensation if Trump's suit against himself is successful?
2. The second Trump administration reportedly gave all of my personal and confidential information (and yours, too) to Elon Musk and the juvenile delinquents he had running the (completely non-official) Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Goddammit, I want $20 billion - in small bills!
3. If Trump and his family are free from tax audits forevermore, then I expect nothing less than the same damned thing for myself and my family members. My government has harmed me, too, but my megaphone is not as large as that of the bellicose toddler waddling around the White House!
What's good for one decrepit old geezer ought to be good for another!

