Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Man behind Trump tax-return leak gets 5 years

- LINDSAY WHITEHURST

WASHINGTON — A former contractor for the Internal Revenue Service who pleaded guilty to leaking tax informatio­n to news outlets about former President Donald Trump and thousands of the country’s wealthiest people was sentenced to five years in prison Monday.

Charles Edward Littlejohn, 38, of Washington, D.C., gave data to The New York Times and ProPublica between 2018 and 2020 in leaks that appeared to be “unparallel­ed in the IRS’ history,” prosecutor­s said.

U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes imposed the maximum sentence, saying the crime targeted the nation’s system of government and its democracy.

“When you target the sitting president of the United States, you target the office,” she said. “It can not be open season on our elected officials.”

Littlejohn apologized and said he alone bears responsibi­lity. “I acted out of a sincere, if misguided, belief I was serving the public interest,” he said. “My actions undermined the fragile trust we place in government.”

Defense attorney Lisa Manning argued for a lower sentence in line with typical guidelines for someone without a criminal record. But Reyes pushed back, saying the crime was extraordin­ary and the sentence must “deter others who might feel an obligation to break the law.”

Reyes, who questioned why Littlejohn faced a single felony count of unauthoriz­ed disclosure of tax returns and return informatio­n, also imposed three years of supervised release and a $5,000 fine.

Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida said he was among those whose tax informatio­n was leaked by Littlejohn. The possibilit­y it could be published affects his entire family, he said, arguing that Littlejohn should have faced additional criminal charges from the Justice Department for exposing personal informatio­n “just to harm people.”

Littlejohn had applied to work at the contractor to get Trump’s tax returns and carefully figured out how to search and extract tax data to avoid triggering suspicions internally, prosecutor­s said in court documents.

Prosecutor­s had pushed for the five-year sentence, which is among the longest sentences handed down in a leak investigat­ion, according to the Justice Department. Nicole Argentieri, acting assistant attorney general of the department’s criminal division, said the sentence “sends a strong message that those who violate laws intended to protect sensitive tax informatio­n will face significan­t punishment.”

Prosecutor­s did not name Trump or the outlets in charging documents, but the descriptio­n and time frame align with stories about Trump’s tax returns in The New York Times and reporting about wealthy Americans’ taxes in the nonprofit investigat­ive journalism organizati­on ProPublica.

The 2020 New York Times report found Trump, who had broken with tradition and refused to voluntaril­y release his tax returns, paid $750 in federal income tax the year he entered the White House and no income tax at all some years thanks to colossal losses. Six years of his returns were later released by the then-Democratic­ally controlled House Ways and Means Committee.

ProPublica, meanwhile, reported in 2021 on a trove of tax-return data about the wealthiest Americans. It found the 25 richest people legally pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than many ordinary workers do.

Both publicatio­ns have declined to comment on the charges, and ProPublica reporters previously said they didn’t know the identity of the source. The stories sparked calls for reform on taxes for the wealthy — and calls for investigat­ions into the leaking of tax informatio­n, which has specific legal protection­s.

The IRS has said any disclosure of taxpayer informatio­n is unacceptab­le and the agency has since tightened security.

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