Federal

  • February 02, 2026

    Spencer Fane Expands To New Orleans With Litigation Hire

    Spencer Fane LLP announced that an experienced Louisiana-based attorney from Phelps Dunbar LLP has joined the firm's litigation and dispute resolution team as a partner, marking the fast-growing firm's initial foray into the New Orleans market.

  • February 02, 2026

    US Drops $185K FBAR Case Amid State Dept. Silence

    The U.S. Department of Justice dropped its case Monday accusing a U.S. citizen living in Switzerland of hiding bank accounts from the IRS, telling a D.C. federal court that the U.S. Department of State fell silent on a request for help from Swiss authorities.

  • February 02, 2026

    OECD Amends Tax Treaty Manual To Up Dispute Resolution

    The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development is updating guidance for tax treaties to strengthen tax treaty mechanisms for preventing cross-border tax disputes, according to a statement Monday.

  • February 02, 2026

    Norton Rose Grows In Key Cities By Adding 5 Polsinelli Attys

    Norton Rose Fulbright announced Monday that it has added five former Polsinelli PC shareholders as partners to grow its transactional and healthcare capabilities in two key U.S. markets.

  • January 30, 2026

    Senate Sends Package With $11.2B IRS Budget To House

    The Senate passed an appropriations package Friday that would fund several government departments and agencies, including the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and provide the Internal Revenue Service with an $11.2 billion budget.

  • January 30, 2026

    The Tax Angle: Congressional Taxwriters Head For The Exits

    This edition of The Tax Angle examines upcoming retirements among members of the Senate Finance and House Ways and Means committees ahead of the midterm elections this November.  

  • January 30, 2026

    3 Things To Keep In Mind About IRS' Corporate Audit Changes

    The IRS' revamped audit process for corporate taxpayers will likely streamline examinations, but companies may now shoulder new responsibilities when presenting facts and face lingering uncertainties when weighing whether to participate in a broadened settlement program. Here, Law360 examines three key issues for companies to consider under the new audit process.

  • January 30, 2026

    Ex-Fla. Rep. Says Prosecutor Has 'Personal Animus' In DQ Bid

    A former Florida congressman and a lobbyist charged with failing to register as foreign agents for Venezuela urged a federal court to disqualify an assistant U.S. attorney in the case, saying Friday that the prosecutor has a conflict of interest and "personal animus" toward defense counsel.

  • January 30, 2026

    US Rebukes WTO Siding With China On Energy Tax Credits

    The U.S. Trade Representative condemned the World Trade Organization's decision to side with China in a dispute over energy tax credits passed during former President Joe Biden's term Friday, calling the global body's dispute resolution mechanism inadequate.

  • January 30, 2026

    DOJ Seeks Halliburton's Legal Memo In $35M Tax Fight

    Halliburton has overblown its attorney-client privilege claims over a set of key legal documents the U.S. Department of Justice wants the global oil field operator to disclose as part of the company's $35 million tax refund dispute, the DOJ told a Texas federal court.

  • January 30, 2026

    Taxation With Representation: Clifford Chance, Ropes & Gray

    In this week's Taxation With Representation, real estate investment trust Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance Inc. announces plans to sell a loan portfolio to retirement services company Athene Holding Ltd., engineering and technology company Leidos acquires Entrust Solutions Group, and Prosperity Bancshares Inc. and Stellar Bancorp Inc. announce a merger.

  • January 30, 2026

    Vertical Farm Co. Owner Gets 3 Years For Tax Evasion, Fraud

    The owner of a vertical farming business was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay nearly $1 million in restitution after he admitted to evading taxes and lying to his clients, according to a judgment filed Friday in Pennsylvania federal court.

  • January 30, 2026

    Weekly Internal Revenue Bulletin

    The Internal Revenue Service's weekly bulletin, published Friday, included guidance governing the eligibility for and calculation of a retooled tax deduction for the additional first year of depreciation of an asset-producing property.

  • January 29, 2026

    Trump Sues IRS, Treasury For $10B Over Tax Doc Leak

    President Donald Trump is seeking at least $10 billion in damages in a new lawsuit filed Thursday in Miami federal court that accuses the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Department of the Treasury of failing to prevent a former IRS contractor from leaking Trump's tax returns to news outlets.

  • February 05, 2026

    CORRECTED: Ex-Worker Says Goldstein Offered Crypto, Gifts As IRS Probed

    A former employee at Thomas Goldstein's law firm who resigned after the Internal Revenue Service began investigating the firm said that the SCOTUSblog founder suddenly began offering her bitcoin, payment from case settlements and potential student loan relief after federal agents visited the office. Correction: An earlier version of this story, which was published January 29, mischaracterized the testimony of Special Agent Quoc Tuan Nguyen. Special Agent Nguyen addressed the dates in metadata that were altered in the course of the document production and did not allege Goldstein engaged in misconduct regarding the emails.

  • January 29, 2026

    Ex-Boston Activist Given Probation For Fraud Schemes

    A former prominent Boston activist was spared from a prison term by a Massachusetts federal judge Thursday at her sentencing for misusing thousands of dollars in donor funds for personal expenses and fraudulently claiming housing and unemployment benefits.

  • January 29, 2026

    Congress' Limited Tariff Role May Persist After Justices Rule

    The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on President Donald Trump's emergency tariffs could leave the door open for Congress to play a larger role in trade policy heading into November's midterms, but that opportunity may pose few political incentives for lawmakers.

  • January 29, 2026

    8th Circ.'s Ruling For 3M 'Makes No Sense,' Gov't Says

    The Eighth Circuit's ruling that Brazilian law prevented the IRS from reallocating income to 3M from its subsidiary in that country "makes no sense" because the law limits only royalties, not other forms of income, the government argued Thursday in seeking a rehearing by the full court.

  • January 29, 2026

    What Makes A Good Tax Court Expert? Economists Share Tips

    It's not easy being an expert witness in a U.S. Tax Court case. Lawyers ask leading questions and bring up old research; hypothetical scenarios abound, requiring analysis on the fly; and judges have varying levels of expertise, with some seeking detailed explanation and others offended by it.

  • January 29, 2026

    Minor League Hockey Exec Charged With Tax Fraud In NC

    The CEO and minority owner of Charlotte's minor league hockey team is facing tax fraud charges after federal prosecutors in North Carolina said he failed to report more than $4.5 million in income from his charity and skipped filing tax returns altogether in certain years.

  • January 29, 2026

    Microsemi To Report $144M In Overseas Sales In Settlement

    Semiconductor manufacturer Microsemi has agreed to report $144 million in income from sales to its Irish affiliate but will avoid some tax penalties under the terms of a transfer pricing settlement with the Internal Revenue Service, according to a filing in the U.S. Tax Court.

  • January 28, 2026

    Unions Say FEMA Staff Cuts Threaten Disaster Readiness

    A coalition of unions, nonprofit organizations and local governments that are challenging the Trump administration's federal worker layoffs and agency reorganizations asked a California federal judge Tuesday for permission to add the Federal Emergency Management Agency as a defendant, saying ongoing staff cuts threaten its legally mandated responsibility to respond to disasters.

  • January 28, 2026

    Tobey Maguire Says He Rerouted Fee To Goldstein

    "Spider-Man" star Tobey Maguire told the jury Wednesday in Thomas Goldstein's tax fraud trial that he paid $500,000 for his legal services to another poker player the former SCOTUSblog founder owed money to, rather than Goldstein's law firm.

  • January 28, 2026

    Tax Court Rejects Aventis' Securitizing Debt Assets

    Pharmaceutical giant Aventis Inc. is ineligible for a favorable tax treatment on its securitization of financial assets, the U.S. Tax Court ruled Wednesday, finding the company did not comply with statutory requirements and failed to show it was not the beneficial owner of the assets.

  • January 28, 2026

    Taxpayer Advocate Predicts Errors, Delays This Tax Season

    The IRS has demonstrably improved service over the last few tax filing seasons, but errors and delays could be a hallmark of the 2026 season as the agency enacts tax changes while facing a significant staff shortage, the national taxpayer advocate said Wednesday.

Expert Analysis

  • A Uniform Federal Rule Would Curb Gen AI Missteps In Court

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    To address the patchwork of courts’ standing orders on generative artificial intelligence, curbing abuses and relieving the burden on judges, the federal judiciary should consider amending its civil procedure rules to require litigants to certify they’ve reviewed legal filings for accuracy, say attorneys at Shook Hardy.

  • Nonprofits Face Uncertainty Over Political Activity Rules

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    Two federal court decisions suggesting that the Internal Revenue Service's rules for 501(c)(4) organizations' political activity may be too vague to survive constitutional scrutiny leave nonprofit organizations caught between constitutional limits on government regulation of speech and tax limits on their exempt status, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

  • Supreme Court Term Limits Would Carry Hidden Risk

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    While proposals for limiting the terms of U.S. Supreme Court justices are popular, a steady stream of relatively young, highly marketable ex-justices with unique knowledge and influence entering the marketplace of law and politics could create new problems, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • Tariffs And Trade Volatility Drove 2025 Bankruptcy Wave

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    The Trump administration's tariff regime has reshaped the commercial restructuring landscape this year, with an increased number of bankruptcy filings showing how tariffs are influencing first‑day narratives, debtor-in-possession terms and case strategies, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.

  • AI Evidence Rule Tweaks Encourage Judicial Guardrails

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    Recent additions to a committee note on proposed Rule of Evidence 707 — governing evidence generated by artificial intelligence — seek to mitigate potential dangers that may arise once machine outputs are introduced at trial, encouraging judges to perform critical gatekeeping functions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.

  • The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Getting The Message Across

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    Communications and brand strategy during a law firm merger represent a crucial thread that runs through every stage of a combination and should include clear messaging, leverage modern marketing tools and embrace the chance to evolve, says Ashley Horne at Womble Bond.

  • Horizontal Stare Decisis Should Not Be Casually Discarded

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    Eliminating the so-called law of the circuit doctrine — as recently proposed by a Fifth Circuit judge, echoing Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurrence in Loper Bright — would undermine public confidence in the judiciary’s independence and create costly uncertainty for litigants, says Lawrence Bluestone at Genova Burns.

  • 10 Commandments For Agentic AI Tools In The Legal Industry

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    Though agentic artificial intelligence has demonstrated significant promise for optimizing legal work, it presents numerous risks, so specific ethical obligations should be built into the knowledge base of every agentic AI tool used in the legal industry, says Steven Cordero at Akerman LLP.

  • A Close Look At The Evolving Interval Fund Space

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    Interval funds — closed-end registered investment companies that make periodic repurchase offers — have recently moved to the center of the conversation about retail access to private markets, spurred along by President Donald Trump's August executive order incorporating alternative assets into 401(k) plans and target date strategies, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • The Law Firm Merger Diaries: How To Build On Cultural Fit

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    Law firm mergers should start with people, then move to strategy: A two-level screening that puts finding a cultural fit at the pinnacle of the process can unearth shared values that are instrumental to deciding to move forward with a combination, says Matthew Madsen at Harrison.

  • Rare Tariff Authority May Boost US Battery Manufacturing

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    Finalizing preliminary tariffs on active anode material from China — the result of a rare exercise of statutory authority finding that foreign dumping hampered the development of a nascent U.S. industry — should help domestic battery manufacturing, but potential price increases could discourage related clean-energy use, say attorneys at MoloLamken.

  • Considerations When Invoking The Common-Interest Privilege

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    To successfully leverage the common-interest doctrine in a multiparty transaction or complex litigation, practitioners should be able to demonstrate that the parties intended for it to apply, that an underlying privilege like attorney-client has attached, and guard against disclosures that could waive privilege and defeat its purpose, say attorneys at DLA Piper.

  • The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Making The Case To Combine

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    When making the decision to merge, law firm leaders must factor in strategic alignment, cultural compatibility and leadership commitment in order to build a compelling case for combining firms to achieve shared goals and long-term success, says Kevin McLaughlin at UB Greensfelder.

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