A federal judge has reopened Trump's IRS lawsuit, has question the $1.7 billion agreement for Trump allies and has demanded the administration answer allegation that the suit was "premised on deception."
Wow. A group of former judges is calling on the court that oversaw Trump's bullshit IRS lawsuit to examine whether the "settlement" creating the slush fund and giving IRS immunity to Trump, his family, and his businesses constituted fraud on the court.
-- Greg Sargent (@gregsargent.bsky.social) 10:28 AM · May 28, 2026
[image or embed]
In Texas state court a "nonsuit" (plaintiff's motion to voluntarily dismiss) is self effecting and generally non-reviewable. www.google.com
In federal court it's a bit more complicated. www.google.com
Drudge Retort Headlines
700k Kids Lose Food Aid (97 comments)
Ken Paxton Wins Texas Runoff Election for Senate Seat (31 comments)
Trump DOJ Launches Criminal Probe Into E. Jean Carroll: Sources (25 comments)
Meta says Goodbye to Those Who Won't Use AI (21 comments)
Scott Bessent Wants to Put Trump on $250 Bill (19 comments)
US Revises 1st Quarter Growth Down While Inflation Climbs (14 comments)
Trump Threatens to Blow Up Oman (13 comments)
Why Trump isn't Bothering to Hide his Corruption (12 comments)
Democratic Attorneys General Snub Vance's anti-Fraud Roundtable (11 comments)
Poll: Trump Supporters Reject His Anti-Weaponization Fund (9 comments)