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DOGE to Shutter DOJ Tax Division

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April 8, 2025 2:32 p.m.
US President Donald Trump speaks during a briefing at the White House September 27, 2020, in Washington, DC. - US President Donald Trump paid just $750 in federal income taxes in 2016, the year he won the election, T... US President Donald Trump speaks during a briefing at the White House September 27, 2020, in Washington, DC. - US President Donald Trump paid just $750 in federal income taxes in 2016, the year he won the election, The New York Times reported September 27, 2020, citing tax return data extending more than 20 years. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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I didn’t know this until this morning. And I’m surprised it hasn’t gotten more press attention. We know that DOGE is in the process of gutting the IRS. According to internal IRS estimates reviewed by The Washington Post, this internal sabotage is already estimated to have cost the U.S. Treasury more than $500 billion in revenues that otherwise would have been raised by April 15th. But it doesn’t stop at the IRS. DOGE is also in the process of essentially closing down the Tax Division at the Department of Justice.

Since the Tax Division is a statutory creation, it can’t literally be shuttered. As DOGE has done at numerous other offices and agencies, the entity is kept notionally alive in a zombie state of suspended animation: a few employees, a desk lamp and a couple workstations. That’s the legal fig leaf that allows the White House, with a compliant judiciary, to say that it hasn’t violated any congressional statute or terminated one of Congress’ creations. It’s simply choosing a new strategy of enforcement.

What they plan to do is essentially “reform” and “reorganize” the Tax Division out of existence. The plan is to dramatically reduce the number of Tax Division staff attorneys and then take the great majority of those that remain and disperse them out to the country’s 93 U.S. attorneys’ offices. Only a small managerial layer is to be left working from Washington, DC. In the nature of things, the most experienced lawyers in the division will be those with families and roots in the Washington, DC area. So presumably quite a few of them won’t be willing to relocate to offices around the country. If they’re replaced it will be with new hires without the institutional experience of their predecessors. Like a body sliced into a hundred pieces, it will simply shrivel and die. And that, more or less, will be the end of the Tax Division. I’m told this is likely to be announced next week, on April 14th.

This plan is alluded to in this March 25th memorandum from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, which was published online by House Judiciary Committee Democrats: “Soliciting Feedback for Agency Reorganization Plan and RIF.” Item #9 reads: “Reducing TAX: reassigning TAX personnel to U.S. Attorneys’ Offices while maintaining a core team of supervisory attorneys to administer relevant provisions of the Justice Manual.”

My understanding is that administering those “relevant provisions of the Justice Manual” essentially means complying with the core minimum statutory requirements of the law which created the Tax Division, even after the division itself is for all practical purposes gone. I understand that there is a more detailed internal IRS memo, yet to see the light of day, which covers the plan in more detail. (Do you have that memo? See the details on my encrypted channels below and please send it to me. Thanks in advance.)

When you combine this with the gutting of the IRS itself, it basically means a radical diminution of tax enforcement in the United States. If you make more than, say, a million dollars a year, paying taxes is probably going to be voluntary going forward.

It’s a new feature of billionairedom.

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