
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tara Palmeri sits down with Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times investigative reporter Russ Buettner to break down what may be the most brazen act of presidential self-dealing in American history: Trump's $1.776 billion IRS "settlement." Buettner explains how two Trump subordinates — acting AG Todd Blanche (Trump's former personal defense attorney) and Treasury officials — quietly cut a deal that creates a massive slush fund with no public reporting requirements, wipes away a 15-year audit over a suspicious $72.9 million tax refund that could have cost Trump well over $100 million, and includes a sweeping addendum that "forever bars" the IRS from auditing Trump, his family, and any "affiliated individuals" — language so broad it could cover Jared Kushner and his crypto partners. They dig into why the IRS thought they could win the case, how Trump declared over $1 billion in losses from his casinos and Chicago Tower (possibly claiming the same losses twice), how January 6th defendants are already lining up for $30 million payouts from the fund, and why a senior Treasury lawyer reportedly quit over what was coming. Plus: why lawyers won't even call it a "settlement," whether a future administration can reverse it, and why this may amount to the president having deputized and funded a militia.
0:00 – Intro: Pulitzer Prize-winning NYT reporter Russ Buettner on Trump's IRS deal
5:57 – The $72.9 million refund, The Apprentice windfall, and a 15-year audit
10:24 – Todd Blanche signed the deal — Trump's former personal defense attorney
15:16 – "Forever barred": the sweeping non-prosecution language no taxpayer has ever received
20:58 – The $1.776 billion slush fund and January 6th defendants demanding $30 million
26:00 – Pandora's box: elected kings, future presidents, and the self-dealing precedent
30:02 – "The most corrupt moment I've ever lived through"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Tara Palmeri4.4
230230 ratings
Tara Palmeri sits down with Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times investigative reporter Russ Buettner to break down what may be the most brazen act of presidential self-dealing in American history: Trump's $1.776 billion IRS "settlement." Buettner explains how two Trump subordinates — acting AG Todd Blanche (Trump's former personal defense attorney) and Treasury officials — quietly cut a deal that creates a massive slush fund with no public reporting requirements, wipes away a 15-year audit over a suspicious $72.9 million tax refund that could have cost Trump well over $100 million, and includes a sweeping addendum that "forever bars" the IRS from auditing Trump, his family, and any "affiliated individuals" — language so broad it could cover Jared Kushner and his crypto partners. They dig into why the IRS thought they could win the case, how Trump declared over $1 billion in losses from his casinos and Chicago Tower (possibly claiming the same losses twice), how January 6th defendants are already lining up for $30 million payouts from the fund, and why a senior Treasury lawyer reportedly quit over what was coming. Plus: why lawyers won't even call it a "settlement," whether a future administration can reverse it, and why this may amount to the president having deputized and funded a militia.
0:00 – Intro: Pulitzer Prize-winning NYT reporter Russ Buettner on Trump's IRS deal
5:57 – The $72.9 million refund, The Apprentice windfall, and a 15-year audit
10:24 – Todd Blanche signed the deal — Trump's former personal defense attorney
15:16 – "Forever barred": the sweeping non-prosecution language no taxpayer has ever received
20:58 – The $1.776 billion slush fund and January 6th defendants demanding $30 million
26:00 – Pandora's box: elected kings, future presidents, and the self-dealing precedent
30:02 – "The most corrupt moment I've ever lived through"
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

12,741 Listeners

4,650 Listeners

4,030 Listeners

8,371 Listeners

4,669 Listeners

9,295 Listeners

2,608 Listeners

2,307 Listeners

3,186 Listeners

1,180 Listeners

3,472 Listeners

662 Listeners

1,082 Listeners

791 Listeners

971 Listeners