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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump lawyers: No collusion with Trump administration to create 'Anti-Weaponization' fund
I admit that I am a geek. I found and read trump's filing late last night. I was NOT impressed. Basically, there was no collusion and there was a real "case or controversy" (this is required for the court to have jurisdiction) because they say so. I was NOT impressed

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/12/trump-lawyers-no-collusion-trump-administration-anti-weaponization-fund-00961288
The Friday night filing with a federal judge in Miami was the first public defense of the settlement by Trumps private attorneys since it came under intense attack by lawmakers, prompting the administration to retreat from the planned $1.8 billion fund for victims of allegedly politicized investigations and indictments.
Trump sued the agency for $10 billion in January over the 2020 leak of his tax returns by an IRS contractor who subsequently pleaded guilty to the breach. The lawsuit raised immediate questions about a conflict raised by the sitting president suing an agency he oversees. But Trump quickly abandoned the suit as details about the settlement began to emerge.
Trumps lawyers invoked a federal court rule that allows plaintiffs in a case to drop it early in the litigation without explanation or substantive involvement by the judge....
Attorneys for President Donald Trump are rejecting allegations that they defrauded a federal court in Florida by bringing a lawsuit against the IRS only to settle with the Trump-led Justice Department in a deal crafted to establish a so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund.
The Friday night filing with a federal judge in Miami was the first public defense of the settlement by Trumps private attorneys since it came under intense attack by lawmakers, prompting the administration to retreat from the planned $1.8 billion fund for victims of allegedly politicized investigations and indictments.
Trump sued the agency for $10 billion in January over the 2020 leak of his tax returns by an IRS contractor who subsequently pleaded guilty to the breach. The lawsuit raised immediate questions about a conflict raised by the sitting president suing an agency he oversees. But Trump quickly abandoned the suit as details about the settlement began to emerge.
Trumps lawyers invoked a federal court rule that allows plaintiffs in a case to drop it early in the litigation without explanation or substantive involvement by the judge.
Again, for a federal court to have jurisdiction, there must be a "case or controversy". trump was on both sides of this litigation and this brief wants to ignore reality.
This will be fun to watch.
Ocelot II
(131,779 posts)That's the entire purpose of this DoJ - to collude with Trump to give him whatever he wants.
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,817 posts)I read this filing last night and was not impressed
https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/28241060/trumpirsflg061226.pdf
Here are a couple of sections that amused me
U.S.C. § 1304 is beyond the scope of the Rule 60 motion before this Court. Whether the settlement
satisfies the statutory requirements for use of the Judgment Fund is a question for the Executive
Branch, or, potentially, for a court with proper jurisdiction over a challenge to the settlement
itselfnot for this Court in the context of a Rule 60 motion filed by non-parties who lack standing.
Tellingly, Movants acknowledge that the Court need not decide that ultimate issue now, thereby
conceding that the merits of the settlements validity are not properly before the Court at this stage.
See, e.g., DE 63 at 4.
The existence of a genuine case or controversy at the time of filing is a separate question
from whether the governments decisions were sound. The IRS was named as a defendant,
Plaintiffs alleged concrete injuries from the disclosure of their tax return information (the
unauthorized disclosure of return information is independently actionable, see 26 U.S.C. §§ 6103,
7431), and the Governments decision to settle rather than litigate does not by itself render the
underlying claims fraudulent or the litigation collusive. Movants characterization of the
commission as effectively controlled by the President, DE 63 at 2, is a contested
characterization, not an established legal finding, and cannot support the extraordinary remedy of
voiding a final judgment.
This also amused me. trump is claiming that there is no fraud because they say there is no fraud
speculation. They point to the governments litigation posture: the absence of filed appearances,
the scope of the settlement, and the decision not to assert defenses that were available in parallel
litigation. Based on these bare-bones assertions, they ask the Court to wrongly conclude that the
entire case was a sham. But none of these facts, individually or collectively, constitute evidence of
collusion, much less the clear and convincing evidence required to establish fraud on the court.
See, e.g., Booker v. Dugger, 825 F.2d 281, 28384 (11th Cir. 1987) (fraud on the court must be
established by clear and convincing evidence and conclusory averments do not suffice).
The Governments decision not to raise every available defense is a litigation judgment,
not a badge of fraud. Defendants in civil cases routinely elect not to contest certain claims for
strategic, economic, or institutional reasons, including the entirely rational conclusion that the cost
of defense exceeds the cost of settlement. The fact that the IRS may have identified viable defenses
in internal memoranda does not mean it was obligated to assert them, and the decision not to do
so does not give rise to an inference of collusion. Movants cite no authority whatsoever, and
Plaintiffs are aware of none, holding that a defendants decision to settle rather than litigate
available defenses constitutes fraud on the court.
In sum, the Movants position amounts to the assertion that because they disagree with the
governments decision to settle, the settlement must have been collusive. That is not a legal
standard. It is a policy objection dressed as a fraud claim, and it does not warrant the extraordinary
remedy of reopening a closed case, which, in any event, this Court does not have the power to do.
Again, I am NOT impressed by this filing.
Ocelot II
(131,779 posts)But they don't really address the question of whether a president who is the head of the executive branch is really an adverse party to an executive branch agency.
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,817 posts)I was also surprised that trump did not try to re-write this filing. It will be fun to see if the DOJ makes a filing and if trump has a hand in re-writing that filing
Turbineguy
(40,284 posts)they can always learn how to operate a crematorium.
Lovie777
(24,426 posts)everybody around shithole's sphere are bad apples.
LetMyPeopleVote
(183,817 posts)In a notice to a federal judge, the Trump administration says such a sworn declaration is unnecessary and a violation of separation of powers.
Trump DOJ refuses to kill âanti-weaponizationâ fund in sworn court declaration
— CVJ (@enuffsaysv.bsky.social) 2026-06-19T19:54:52.104Z
In a notice to a federal judge, the Trump administration says such a sworn declaration is âunnecessaryâ & a violation of separation of powers
MS NOW: apple.news/AnPwv1qfrTgy...
ðhell no, capitol switchboard 202-224-3121
https://www.ms.now/news/trump-doj-refuses-to-kill-anti-weaponization-fund-in-sworn-court-declaration
Instead, the Department of Justice continued to rely on Acting Attorney General Todd Blanches congressional testimony that the administration is not moving forward with the fund.
In a notice to the court, the DOJ wrote, Such declarations are unnecessary and the compelled testimony of senior officials from the Executive Branch implicates serious separation of powers concerns.
The refusal by Blanche and the DOJ to put a pledge in writing not to create the fund aimed at compensating those who believe they were the victims of alleged prosecutorial overreach is likely to spark political backlash, especially on Capitol Hill where Blanches permanent nomination to head the department is pending.
The DOJ maintains its public statements both in Blanches congressional testimony and in written court filings and hearings should be sufficient. All these statements were made under the backdrop of serious penalties for falsity, it writes. So there is no reason why declarations should affect the Courts mootness analysis.,,,,,
At last weeks hearing in Virginia, Brinkema expressed similar misgivings about Trumps comments and Blanches reluctance to put a pledge not to create the fund in writing. These misgivings will likely continue to bubble now that the DOJ has declined to submit the declaration and the litigation will likely continue.
There are at least two separate federal court cases. In addition to the Virginia case described above, there is a separate lawsuit brought by 35 retired federal judges seeking to litigate (i) whether this slush fund was a "fraud on the court" and (ii) whether there was a valid lawsuit in the first place because there was no case or controversy. trump's attorneys refused to answer the courts issues in that case. This will be fun to watch