Federal
-
July 30, 2025
Groups Warn IRS Policy Shift Could Beget Dark Money Deluge
Leaders of national nonprofit organizations said Wednesday that the IRS' efforts to weaken a 71-year-old tax law banning churches from endorsing political candidates would lead to unlimited amounts of untraceable campaign contributions flowing through the nonprofit sector.
-
July 30, 2025
Dechert Adds Tax Pro From PwC In DC
Dechert LLP has continued to grow its financial services platform in Washington, D.C., with the hire of a partner from PwC.
-
July 30, 2025
Trump To Hit India With 25% Tariff, 'Penalty' Starting Friday
President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he planned to impose a 25% tariff on India beginning Friday, plus an additional "penalty," citing the country's energy and defense dealings with Russia as top concerns along with trade barriers.
-
July 29, 2025
IRS To Permit Corp. AMT Top-Down Election For Partnerships
The IRS said Tuesday that revised proposed rules for the corporate alternative minimum tax will accommodate different approaches to calculating a partnership's investment income, including the top-down approach permitting a corporate partner to use figures that the partner reported in its own financial statement.
-
July 29, 2025
Economists Decry Federal Budget's Looser Interest Deduction
It's regrettable that Congress loosened rules allowing companies to deduct interest costs from tax liabilities in its latest budget, which as a whole is poised to worsen the country's fiscal trajectory while prompting higher interest rates, a panel of economists said Tuesday.
-
July 29, 2025
Refiners Seek Clarity From Treasury For Clean Fuel Credit
The U.S. Treasury Department should clarify at what points during the refining process an oil and gas mixture qualifies for the clean fuel production tax credit to be consistent with its preceding incentive for biofuels, an oil and gas refining association said in a letter released Tuesday.
-
July 29, 2025
Ensure Energy Tax Credit Limit On Foreign Cos., Letter Says
The U.S. Department of the Treasury should publish guidance aimed at preventing foreign corporations from circumventing the new budget law's limits on energy tax credits by starting construction before the restrictions kick in, a solar technology and manufacturing company said in a letter Tuesday.
-
July 29, 2025
Ex-IRS Acting Commissioner Joins KPMG's DC Office
A former senior Internal Revenue Service employee who served as the agency's acting commissioner this year has joined KPMG LLP's Washington national tax practice as a senior managing director, the firm announced.
-
July 29, 2025
4th Circ. Rejects BofA's Claim Of Tax Offsets After Mergers
Bank of America cannot use its tax overpayments to offset interest on tax underpayments by Merrill Lynch just because the two companies later merged, the Fourth Circuit affirmed Tuesday in a $163 million case that affects more than 20 years' worth of tax adjustments.
-
July 29, 2025
IRS Wrong To Fight Flexible Tax Court Deadline, 8th Circ. Told
A couple arguing for flexibility to the 90-day deadline for challenging tax bills in the U.S. Tax Court told the Eighth Circuit that the Internal Revenue Service is wrong in claiming that such leniency would upend tax collection.
-
July 28, 2025
New IRS Chief Rejects 'Wizard Of Oz'-Style Leadership
New Internal Revenue Commissioner Billy Long vowed Monday to engage more directly with agency employees to improve taxpayer service, emphasizing that he does not want to be a "Wizard of Oz"-style leader hiding behind a curtain.
-
July 28, 2025
SALT Cap Complexity Could Rewrite Tax Planning Strategies
The new $40,000 cap on state and local tax deductibility in the GOP's 2025 tax overhaul will likely prompt a new wave of strategic tax planning activity among wealthy business owners and individuals seeking to maximize their deductions and make use of state-level workarounds before the temporary relief expires.
-
July 28, 2025
Fired Worker Owes Tax On $1.5M Settlement, Tax Court Says
A former PNC Investments LLC employee who won a defamation settlement after being fired must pay tax on the $1.5 million award, the U.S. Tax Court said Monday, rejecting the ex-worker's argument that the money didn't count as income.
-
July 28, 2025
10th Circ. Says Carbon Group Can't Appeal Tax Assessment
An entity that owns interest in a carbon producer can't appeal a $2 million tax assessment made by a Colorado county on a carbon unit operator that the entity owns interest in because the federal court doesn't have jurisdiction, the Tenth Circuit said Monday.
-
July 28, 2025
Trailer Maker's Bid To Escape $4M Excise Taxes Dismissed
A trailer manufacturer can't avoid more than $4 million in excise taxes, interest and penalties, a South Dakota federal court ruled, finding it couldn't rely on an exemption from a technical advice memorandum after Congress altered the definition of off-highway vehicles.
-
July 28, 2025
US, Japanese Businessman Settle $11.6M FBAR Dispute
A Japanese businessman and the federal government have settled their $11.6 million tax filing dispute after the man claimed a language barrier was to blame and the U.S. tried to push past a jury's verdict, according to a Hawaii federal court filing.
-
July 25, 2025
Trump Trade Deals Do Little To Ease Importers' Concerns
President Donald Trump's recently announced framework trade deals offer new insight into tariff rates for several countries come Aug. 1, but experts say unanswered questions about those agreements and others still at large continue to stifle longer-term planning, leaving importers in uncertain territory.
-
July 25, 2025
Ex-Credit Suisse Client Gets 2½ Years For Hiding Assets
A Florida federal judge on Friday sentenced a Colombian-American businesswoman and former Credit Suisse client to two and a half years in prison for conspiring with family members to hide more than $90 million in assets from the IRS through a series of foreign bank accounts.
-
July 25, 2025
Mayo Clinic's $11.5M Tax Refund Affirmed By 8th Circ.
The Mayo Clinic qualifies as an "educational organization" under federal tax law, making it eligible for a tax exemption for such organizations and meriting a nearly $11.5 million refund, the Eighth Circuit said Friday, affirming a federal district court.
-
July 25, 2025
Vegas Workers Laud Tax Breaks On Tips, OT At Hearing
The new federal tax deductions for tips and overtime pay will be extremely beneficial to working-class residents of Las Vegas, the House Ways and Means Committee heard from workers and others at a field hearing Friday, while Democrats criticized the temporary nature of the tax breaks.
-
July 25, 2025
Rising Star: Gibson Dunn's Michael Q. Cannon
Michael Q. Cannon of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP has been the lead attorney on several high-profile cases, including playing a key role in advising on the tax aspects of the world's largest merger and acquisition deal in 2023, earning him a spot among the tax law practitioners under age 40 honored by Law360 as Rising Stars.
-
July 25, 2025
IRS Provides Guidance Meant To Speed Up Corporate Audits
The Internal Revenue Service released guidance Friday that aims to make audits more efficient for corporate taxpayers, including by phasing out a document request process taxpayers had criticized as time-consuming and of little value.
-
July 25, 2025
Legal Org. Urges DC Circ. To Reject Trump's Tariff Powers
The D.C. Circuit should affirm a ruling that sided with toy makers and blocked President Donald Trump from using an international economic law to impose emergency tariffs because the law does not give the president the authority he claims, a legal organization argued.
-
July 25, 2025
Taxation With Representation: Weil, Freshfields, Linklaters
In this week's Taxation With Representation, CC Capital and One Investment Management acquire Insignia Financial Ltd., catering giant Compass Group PLC acquires Dutch food and hospitality company Vermaat Groep BV, drugmaker Sanofi acquires biotech company Vicebio, and The Ether Machine launches as a public company.
-
July 25, 2025
CPA Charged With $5M Fraud Involving 2 Law Firms
A federal grand jury has charged an accountant with defrauding two law firms and other clients by selling them false tax benefits and pocketing more than $5 million from an account into which they made their payments, according to a superseding indictment in California federal court.
Expert Analysis
-
What To Make Of Dueling Corporate Transparency Act Rulings
Although challenges to the Corporate Transparency Act abound — as highlighted by recent federal court decisions from Alabama and Oregon taking opposite positions on its constitutionality — the act is still law, so companies should comply with their filing requirements or face the potential consequences, say attorneys at Lowenstein Sandler.
-
The Pop Culture Docket: Justice Lebovits On Gilbert And Sullivan
Characters in the 19th century comic operas of Gilbert and Sullivan break the rules of good lawyering by shamelessly throwing responsible critical thought to the wind, providing hilarious lessons for lawyers and judges on how to avoid a surfeit of traps and tribulations, say acting New York Supreme Court Justice Gerald Lebovits and law student Tara Scown.
-
State Of The States' AI Legal Ethics Landscape
Over the past year, several state bar associations, as well as the American Bar Association, have released guidance on the ethical use of artificial intelligence in legal practice, all of which share overarching themes and some nuanced differences, say Eric Pacifici and Kevin Henderson at SMB Law Group.
-
8 Childhood Lessons That Can Help You Be A Better Attorney
A new school year is underway, marking a fitting time for attorneys to reflect on some fundamental life lessons from early childhood that offer a framework for problems that no legal textbook can solve, say Chris Gismondi and Chris Campbell at DLA Piper.
-
How The 2025 Tax Policy Debate Will Affect The Energy Sector
Regardless of the outcome of the upcoming U.S. election, 2025 will bring a major tax policy debate that could affect the energy sector more than any other part of the economy — so stakeholders who could be affected should be engaging now to make sure they understand the stakes, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
-
This Election, We Need To Talk About Court Process
In recent decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has markedly transformed judicial processes — from summary judgment standards to notice pleadings — which has, in turn, affected individuals’ substantive rights, and we need to consider how the upcoming presidential election may continue this pattern, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
-
Mental Health First Aid: A Brief Primer For Attorneys
Amid a growing body of research finding that attorneys face higher rates of mental illness than the general population, firms should consider setting up mental health first aid training programs to help lawyers assess mental health challenges in their colleagues and intervene with compassion, say psychologists Shawn Healy and Tracey Meyers.
-
The Trade And Tax Issues Behind US-Canada Digital Tax Clash
The new Canadian digital services tax recently went into effect despite objections from the U.S., a controversy that represents an unusual mix of trade and tax policy, and many companies have been pondering how it will affect their e-commerce businesses, says Damon Pike at BDO.
-
Litigation Inspiration: Honoring Your Learned Profession
About 30,000 people who took the bar exam in July will learn they passed this fall, marking a fitting time for all attorneys to remember that they are members in a specialty club of learned professionals — and the more they can keep this in mind, the more benefits they will see, says Bennett Rawicki at Hilgers Graben.
-
AI May Limit Key Learning Opportunities For Young Attorneys
The thing that’s so powerful about artificial intelligence is also what’s most scary about it — its ability to detect patterns may curtail young attorneys’ chance to practice the lower-level work of managing cases, preventing them from ever honing the pattern recognition skills that undergird creative lawyering, says Sarah Murray at Trialcraft.
-
A Look At How De Minimis Import Rules May Soon Change
The planned implementation of executive actions focused on the de minimis rule as it applies to shipments means companies should use this interval to evaluate the potential applicability and impact of Section 301, Section 201 or Section 232 duties on their products, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
Ruling On Foreign Dividend Break Offers 2 Tax Court Insights
In Varian v. Commissioner, the U.S. Tax Court allowed a taxpayer's deduction for dividends from foreign subsidiaries, providing clarity on how the U.S. Supreme Court’s Loper Bright decision may affect challenges to Treasury regulations, and revealing a potential disallowance of foreign tax credits, say attorneys at Davis Polk.
-
Why Now Is The Time For Law Firms To Hire Lateral Partners
Partner and associate mobility data from the second quarter of this year suggest that there's never been a better time in recent years for law firms to hire lateral candidates, particularly experienced partners — though this necessitates an understanding of potential red flags, say Julie Henson and Greg Hamman at Decipher Investigative Intelligence.