Letter from Trump lawyers confirms IRS audits
Also provides GOP presidential front-runner a legal excuse for not releasing tax returns

March 31, 2016

Donald Trump has turned to taxes to divert attention from his restrictive, then recanted, comments on women's reproductive rights.

Donald and Melania Trump_NYC Sept  27 2006_Boss Tweed via FlickrDonald and Melania Trump in pre-presidential campaign days, heading into an Oscar de la Renta fashion show in New York City in September 2006. (Photo by Boss Tweed via Flickr)

I hate to help him out, but taxes.

Trump's campaign website has posted a letter from a couple of his attorneys addressing the audit of his federal tax returns.

Unfortunately for the tax curious, the letter doesn't shed any light on what's in recent Trump tax returns. Instead, Sheri Dillon and William Nelson, tax partners at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius write:

"Your personal tax returns have been under continuous examination by the Internal Revenue Service since 2002, consistent with the IRS's practice for large and complex businesses."

Yuge deals, tax issues: The letter goes on to note that the vastness (yoooge!) of Trump's businesses. He "holds interests as the sole or principal owner in approximately 500 separate entities" that are "collectively referred to and do business as The Trump Organization."

The yuge number of transactions, deals and new enterprises in which Trump's businesses are engaged every year mean, according to Dillon and Nelson, that his "personal federal income tax returns are inordinately large and complex for an individual.

OK. We get it. The Donald has yuge tax returns for his yuge business interests.

Details! Please!

Not so fast.

Audits closed, but not really: The Trump attorneys, who say they are "familiar with the status of [Trump's] U.S. federal tax returns for all tax years from 2002 forward," do tell us that IRS audits for tax years 2002 through 2008 "have been closed administratively by agreement with the IRS without assessment or payment, on a net basis, of any deficiency."

Good for The Donald. He didn't cheat on his taxes those years.

Can we now see those returns? Uh, no.

IRS examiners are still looking into Trump's tax returns for the 2009 tax year "and going forward," says the letter.

And those subsequent filings involve transactions and activities that were reported on the earlier, now audit-cleared, returns.

That connection, say Trump's attorneys, that makes the pending tax audits "continuations of prior, closed examinations."

On the advice of my attorneys…: I'm not a lawyer and I've never played one on TV or in any other forum, but it sure looks like the letter was created to give the Republican presidential nominee front-runner ostensible legal cover to not release any of his returns.

All the audits, closed and pending, are all related, so says the letter, so even the returns that the IRS is officially through perusing are not really closed.

And Trump is insistent, despite calls from the public, media, other candidates and even a former IRS commissioner, that he won't make public his returns until all IRS audits are completed.

Now what was it that Shakespeare said about lawyers?

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Tax Season 2026 Continues!

We made it. Tax Day 2025 is finally over. For most of us. When the filing season started on Jan. 26, millions who were expecting refunds filed immediately. Most of us got our returns to the Internal Revenue Service by April 15. But plenty of taxpayers also got extensions. They are looking at an Oct. 15 filing deadline.

Those procrastinating filers aren’t a problem. In fact, the IRS appreciates taxpayers who take time to fill out their 1040 forms correctly. It also is grateful that tax submissions are spread out a bit, especially now that the IRS is a leaner agency. Processing returns is easier when they arrive throughout the year instead of in massive bunches.

But enough about Uncle Sam’s tax collection issues. The focus now is on all y’all who filed for extensions, giving you another six months to complete your return. Since your new mid-October due date will be here before you know it, let’s get started now on meeting it.

The ol’ blog is here to help you finish up your extended Form 1040. You can start with January’s tax tips page, which has links to the rest of the year’s tips by-month collections. You also can peruse various tax categories for more tailored advice by clicking on the More Tax Posts drop-down menu at the top of this (and every) page.

And to make sure you don’t miss your new filing deadline, the count-down clock below will let you know just how much time you to file by Oct. 15. At the latest.e. (Note: I’m in the Central Time Zone, so adjust accordingly for where you live.)

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