Federal

  • October 23, 2025

    Fed. Circ. Affirms No Tax Refunds For Retired United Pilots

    United Airlines pilots who said they overpaid payroll taxes because of the early termination of their retirement plan in the company's bankruptcy can't get partial refunds, the Federal Circuit affirmed Thursday, saying procedural issues doomed their case.

  • October 23, 2025

    Tech Co. Goes After $1.4M IRS Adjustments In Tax Court

    An internet platform company that helps video game developers launch their games challenged $1.4 million in IRS adjustments to its tax return in the U.S. Tax Court, alleging the agency incorrectly told the company to report its software development costs as capital expenses.

  • October 23, 2025

    US Oil Cos. Pay More Tax Abroad Than At Home, Report Says

    American oil and gas companies with foreign extraction operations paid more than 80% of their total taxes abroad in recent years despite producing more oil and gas in the U.S. than everywhere else combined, a corporate transparency group said Thursday.

  • October 23, 2025

    IRS To Float Sourcing Rules For Certain Securities Loans

    The Internal Revenue Service said Thursday it intends to propose regulations that would have it look to the borrower of certain securities, rather than the lender, when determining whether related payments are sourced from the United States.

  • October 23, 2025

    IRS FAQs Include $20K Payment Reporting Requirement

    The Internal Revenue Service updated its FAQs on Thursday to include the budget reconciliation bill's reversal of a law requiring peer-to-peer payment platforms such as Venmo and PayPal to report aggregate payments of $600 or more.

  • October 23, 2025

    Court Won't Rethink 'Survivor' Winner's $3M Tax Bill

    A Rhode Island federal judge won't reconsider his opinion that the first winner of reality show "Survivor" must pay $3.3 million in taxes, maintaining that it is unclear whether the federal government can take his sister's property to pay down the debt.

  • October 22, 2025

    Tax Co.'s Push To Escape Sex Harassment Verdict Falls Short

    An Idaho federal judge rejected a tax business's bid Wednesday to escape potential liability for a $111,000 sexual harassment verdict won by a worker who claimed that the tax company acquired her former employer so that her ex-boss could avoid paying out on her lawsuit.

  • October 22, 2025

    US Among Few Places With Amount B Rules, OECD Reports

    The U.S. is a significant exception to a swath of countries, including China, Japan and the U.K., that lack domestic rules allowing companies to use a transfer pricing method for baseline marketing and distribution activities known as Amount B, the OECD reported Wednesday.

  • October 22, 2025

    Innocent Spouse Claim Is Barred, Tax Court Says

    The wife of a man who failed to report overseas income is on the hook for the couple's shared tax liabilities, the U.S. Tax Court ruled Wednesday, rejecting her request to be cleared under a provision protecting spouses who are unaware of a partner's dealings.

  • October 22, 2025

    IRS Releases FAQs For Employee Retention Credits

    The IRS issued answers Wednesday to a set of frequently asked questions related to the limitations for the fraud-riddled employee retention tax credit program that were implemented under the budget reconciliation law.

  • October 22, 2025

    'The Right Facts' Can Reduce Cos.' Tariff Impacts, Atty Says

    Multinational companies with U.S. distributors that typically bear fewer business risks and earn low profit margins may be able to mitigate the effect of U.S. tariffs on their business as a whole by having a foreign principal bear the tariff costs, an attorney said Wednesday.

  • October 22, 2025

    Belgian Gov't Looks To Overturn US Tax Data Transfer Ruling

    Belgium's data privacy watchdog was wrong to rule that the transfer of personal tax information to the U.S. breaks European Union law, the Belgian government told a Brussels court Wednesday, because the practice was established before the EU's data protection law took effect.

  • October 22, 2025

    Presidential Firing Limits Fight Builds At High Court

    The ousted U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board chair has encouraged the U.S. Supreme Court to include a caveat for "legislative courts" if it overturns precedent that empowers Congress to limit the president's authority to fire certain agency officials, but opponents of independent agencies want a clean break from the status quo. 

  • October 22, 2025

    Senate Sends IRS Clerical Error Correction Bill To Trump

    A bill that would allow the IRS to adjust tax assessments to correct mathematical or clerical errors is headed to President Donald Trump's desk for his signature after the Senate approved the legislation, a senator who co-sponsored a related bill said Wednesday.

  • October 22, 2025

    Trade Court OKs $235K Tax Bill On Korean Soju Imports

    South Korean alcoholic beverages were improperly classified upon entering the U.S., and U.S. Customs and Border Protection correctly calculated a nearly $235,000 bill in unpaid federal excise taxes plus interest, according to the U.S. Court of International Trade.

  • October 22, 2025

    Widow Not Liable For Husband's Tax Debt, 4th Circ. Told

    An 80-year-old widow whose husband was imprisoned after hiding more than $20 million from the IRS told the Fourth Circuit that he was "abusive and controlling" and that she shouldn't have to pay the millions of dollars they jointly owe, despite contrary claims by the government.

  • October 22, 2025

    Construction Co. Owner Hid Income, Tax Court Says

    A man who said he was a former officer of a California construction company was actually a 50% shareholder and failed to report income for 2016, including money diverted from a client to the purchase of a motor home, the U.S. Tax Court found.

  • October 21, 2025

    Nonprofits Face Pressure From GOP Tax Changes, Aides Say

    Nonprofit organizations, charities and universities face sweeping changes under the Republicans' 2025 tax overhaul, Capitol Hill staffers said Tuesday, pointing to higher taxes on executive pay and endowments alongside revamped limits and incentives for individuals and corporations claiming charitable deductions.

  • October 21, 2025

    Partnership Deadline To Dispute IRS Is Fixed, Tax Court Says

    A deadline to petition the U.S. Tax Court to challenge IRS adjustments to partnership returns is effectively fixed and cannot be extended, the court said Tuesday in a reviewed decision that denied an Alabama LLC's late bid to restore a $46 million deduction for donating to charity.

  • October 21, 2025

    Discovery Against Gem Company Halted In Malawi's Tax Probe

    Malawi's government can no longer proceed with discovery against a gemstone company that partnered with a mining outfit the country claims evaded billions of dollars in taxes and royalties on exported rubies and sapphires, a Washington federal judge ruled, vacating his own order.

  • October 21, 2025

    CPA Group Calls For Transition Relief For Tips, OT Deductions

    Internal Revenue Service guidance related to reporting requirements for the new deductions for tips and overtime should include a safe harbor for businesses for the 2025 tax year, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants said in a letter released Tuesday.

  • October 21, 2025

    IRS Publishes Guidance For Car Loan Interest Reporting

    The Internal Revenue Service released transitional guidance Tuesday for businesses' reporting requirements under the budget reconciliation law's new deduction for car loan interest.

  • October 21, 2025

    IRS Moves Tips Deduction Hearing To Phone-Only

    The Internal Revenue Service will hold its scheduled hearing on the nearly 70 occupations proposed to be subject to President Donald Trump's policy of no tax on tips via phone instead of in person, the agency announced Tuesday.

  • October 21, 2025

    Jones Walker Expands To Chicago With Tax Partner Hire

    Jones Walker LLP has hired a Chicago-based attorney for its transactional tax team from Chapman and Cutler LLP, marking its first move into Illinois.

  • October 21, 2025

    Hawaii Domino's Franchisee Sues IRS Over Penalty Dispute

    The IRS owes a Domino's Pizza franchisee $1.6 million in tax refunds for penalties related to failures to report its employee health coverage plan, the franchisee told a Hawaii federal court, saying the company's payroll provider was first to blame and the IRS mishandled the fallout.

Featured Stories

  • Modeling Needed To Gauge Private Equity's Interest Deduction

    Kat Lucero

    The Republican budget law's revival of a more generous business interest deduction has energized private equity deals that heavily rely on loans, though investors must run detailed financial modeling to measure how much the perk might truly pay off.

  • French Digital Tax Ruling Puts Spotlight On Trade Tensions

    Natalie Olivo

    A French court decision that upheld the nation's digital services tax could bolster similar measures in other European Union member states, but legal backing may mean little if countries use DSTs as bargaining chips in tariff negotiations with the United States.

  • Tarter Krinsky Real Estate Chair Sees Office Market 'Normalcy'

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    Despite lingering economic questions, the office market is starting to reach a state of "normalcy," Tarter Krinsky's real estate leader told Law360 in a recent interview.

Expert Analysis

  • Rules Of Origin Revamp May Be Next Big Trade Development

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    The rules of origin for determining what tariff applies to any given import appear to be on the cusp of an important rethink, and it seems likely that the administration will try to align the rule with its overall tariff strategy in one of three ways, says Ted Posner at Baker Botts.

  • IRS Shutdown Backlog May Trigger Collection, Refund Chaos

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    As the IRS continues to send automated collection notices amid the ongoing federal government shutdown, a mounting backlog of unprocessed refunds, collections filings and mail is causing problems for taxpayers that will continue even after the shutdown ends, says Meeren Amin at Fox Rothschild.

  • SDNY OpenAI Order Clarifies Preservation Standards For AI

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    The Southern District of New York’s recent order in the OpenAI copyright infringement litigation, denying discovery of The New York Times' artificial intelligence technology use, clarifies that traditional preservation benchmarks apply to AI content, relieving organizations from using a “keep everything” approach, says Philip Favro at Favro Law.

  • High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal

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    As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • Adapting To Private Practice: 3 Tips On Finding The Right Job

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    After 23 years as a state and federal prosecutor, when I contemplated moving to a law firm, practicing solo or going in-house, I found there's a critical first step — deep self-reflection on what you truly want to do and where your strengths lie, says Rachael Jones at McKool Smith.

  • Painting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Painting trains me to see both the fine detail and the whole composition at once, enabling me to identify friction points while keeping sight of a client's bigger vision, but the most significant lesson I've brought to my legal work has been the value of originality, says Jana Gouchev at Gouchev Law.

  • Compliance Pointers Amid Domestic Terrorism Clampdown

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    A recent presidential memorandum marks a shift in federal domestic-terrorism enforcement that should prompt nonprofits to enhance diligence related to grantees, vendors and events, and financial institutions to shore up their internal resources for increased suspicious-activity monitoring and reporting obligations, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Trump Tax Law Has Mixed Impacts On Commercial Real Estate

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    The One Big Beautiful Bill Act brings sweeping changes to the real estate industry — and while the permanency of opportunity zones and bonus depreciation creates predictability for some taxpayers, sunsetting incentives for renewable energy projects will leave others with hard choices, says Jordan Metzger at Cole Schotz.

  • Protecting Sensitive Court Filings After Recent Cyber Breach

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    In the wake of a recent cyberattack on federal courts' Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, civil litigants should consider seeking enhanced protections for sensitive materials filed under seal to mitigate the risk of unauthorized exposure, say attorneys at Redgrave.

  • What Ethics Rules Say On Atty Discipline For Online Speech

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    Though law firms are free to discipline employees for their online commentary about Charlie Kirk or other social media activity, saying crude or insensitive things on the internet generally doesn’t subject attorneys to professional discipline under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, says Stacie H. Rosenzweig at Halling & Cayo.

  • 2 Rulings Highlight IRS' Uncertain Civil Fraud Penalty Powers

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    Conflicting decisions from the U.S. Tax Court and the Northern District of Texas that hinge on whether the IRS can administratively assert civil fraud penalties since the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in SEC v. Jarkesy provide both opportunities and potential pitfalls for taxpayers, says Michael Landman at Bird Marella.

  • Junior Attys Must Beware Of 5 Common Legal Brief Mistakes

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Junior law firm associates must be careful to avoid five common pitfalls when drafting legal briefs — from including every possible argument to not developing a theme — to build the reputation of a sought-after litigator, says James Argionis at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Digital Asset Report Opens Doors For Banks, But Risks Linger

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    A recent report from a White House working group discussing digital asset market structure signals how banks may elect to expand into digital asset custody, trading and related services in the years ahead, but the road remains layered with challenges, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.