Illustration of President Trump signing a $1.8B settlement in the Oval Office with lawmakers protesting in the background.
Illustration of President Trump signing a $1.8B settlement in the Oval Office with lawmakers protesting in the background.
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Trump reaches settlement creating 1.8 billion dollar fund

President Trump has settled a lawsuit against his own administration, establishing a taxpayer-funded pool of nearly 1.8 billion dollars for people his appointees deem victims of government overreach. The agreement also shields his family and businesses from IRS audits and enforcement actions on past tax returns. Bipartisan lawmakers are moving to block the deal.

The settlement stems from a suit Trump filed against federal agencies over the leak of his tax returns. It creates an anti-weaponization fund financed by American taxpayers. Officials described recipients as victims of lawfare, though critics say it could reward individuals convicted in the January 6 Capitol attack, some of whom Trump pardoned earlier.

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Discussions on X show divided opinions: supporters defend the settlement as IRS compensation for tax leaks redirected to victims of government overreach, while critics call it an illegal slush fund shielding Trump from audits and demand investigations.

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Illustration of President Trump settling IRS lawsuit with anti-weaponization fund, featuring signing in Oval Office with critics in background.
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Trump settles IRS lawsuit with new anti-weaponization fund

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President Trump has dismissed his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS. The move paves the way for a $1.776 billion settlement fund aimed at compensating those who claim government overreach. Critics in Congress and ethics groups have raised concerns over the arrangement.

The Trump administration has settled a lawsuit with the president and established a $1.776 billion fund to compensate victims of what it calls lawfare and weaponization of government.

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President Trump created a taxpayer-funded fund of $1.8 billion to compensate his allies, including January 6 rioters, along with a provision granting IRS immunity to him and his family.

A federal court approved a settlement on January 17, 2025, resolving long-running U.S. litigation involving the Alavi Foundation and interests in the Manhattan office tower at 650 Fifth Avenue. The settlement’s main terms—including transferring Alavi’s assets to a newly created charity and providing $318 million in payments or releases to the U.S. government and terrorism judgment creditors—were later described in a filing with New York’s charities regulator and reported by Jewish Insider.

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The Justice Department has reversed its course and vowed to appeal a decision involving four major law firms. These firms had challenged President Trump's punitive executive orders. The move comes after an initial effort to abandon the appeal was withdrawn.

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