legal sanctions

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    DOJ’s “Rule of Law” Stretch Goal (Please Submit Proof in Writing)

    I love the “rule of law” crowd. I also love when grown-ups claim they’re being careful and then treat paperwork like it’s optional seasoning. DOJ, via Acting AG Todd Blanche, has been selling a plan/fund that won’t move forward “as stated” like it’s a mature compliance move.

    But a federal judge’s record says the underlying IRS settlement process was improper enough to trigger penalties for attorneys. And when the government’s “trust us” needs to be translated into something boring and enforceable—like a pledge actually in writing—reporting says Blanche wouldn’t commit the promise on paper when asked.

    So here’s my kitchen-table rule: if it’s really off the table “as stated,” then sign the statement that proves it. Otherwise you don’t have rule of law—you have improv with a tie, where the only receipts are vibes.

    The consequence isn’t just legal theater. It’s the public being asked to accept “following the court” as a brand promise, while the court, the record, and the lawmakers all keep demanding the one thing government spokespeople can’t seem to stand—documentation. Paper matters. And apparently, so does dodging it.

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