Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Supreme Court Declines to Expand Jury Trial Rights in Tax Penalty Cases

The U.S. Supreme Court recently declined to hear a closely watched case that could have reshaped how tax penalties are litigated, particularly with respect to jury trial rights. The decision leaves intact existing procedural norms in tax controversy—at least for now.

Background of the Case

The dispute arose from IRS fraud penalties exceeding $30 million assessed against two couples, the Hirsches and the Birdmans, tied to alleged misreporting and improper claims of U.S. Virgin Islands residency between 2003 and 2006. The taxpayers challenged the penalties in U.S. Tax Court and requested jury trials, arguing that the penalties were punitive in nature and therefore triggered Seventh Amendment protections.

The Tax Court rejected that request, reiterating the longstanding position that taxpayers do not have a constitutional right to a jury trial in deficiency proceedings against the federal government.

The Jarkesy Argument

The taxpayers’ position gained momentum following the Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in SEC v. Jarkesy, where the Court held that the SEC violated the Seventh Amendment by imposing civil penalties through administrative proceedings without a jury. Relying on that precedent, the taxpayers argued that IRS fraud penalties are similarly punitive and should entitle them to a jury trial.

They sought a writ of mandamus from the Eleventh Circuit to compel the Tax Court to grant a jury trial, asserting that Jarkesy effectively invalidates juryless adjudication of such penalties.

Eleventh Circuit and Mandamus Standard

The Eleventh Circuit denied the request, applying the traditional mandamus standard. The court found that:

·         The taxpayers had alternative means of relief, including appealing a final Tax Court decision.

·         Their right to a jury trial was not “clear and indisputable.”

The taxpayers argued this approach conflicts with other circuits and deepens an existing split over how mandamus should be applied in the jury trial context.

Supreme Court Declines Review

On June 22, 2026, the Supreme Court denied certiorari without comment. While not a ruling on the merits, the denial effectively preserves the status quo:

·         Tax Court proceedings remain non-jury forums.

·         Taxpayers cannot use mandamus as a shortcut to secure jury trials in pending tax cases.

·         The broader constitutional question post-Jarkesy remains unresolved.

Practical Implications

For tax practitioners, the decision reinforces several key points:

·         Jury trials in federal tax disputes remain limited to refund litigation in district court or the Court of Federal Claims—not Tax Court deficiency cases.

·         Jarkesy has not (yet) been extended to IRS enforcement or civil tax penalties.

·         Procedural challenges to Tax Court jurisdiction or structure will likely need to proceed through full litigation and appeal rather than interlocutory relief.

Looking Ahead

Although the Supreme Court declined to take up this case, the underlying issue is far from settled. With continued litigation and support from advocacy groups, the question of whether certain tax penalties are sufficiently punitive to trigger Seventh Amendment protections may return to the Court in a future case with a cleaner procedural posture.

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TCJA & OECD Tax Policy Changes May Have Resulted in IP Returning to the US

According to Laws360, Ireland's payments to the U.S. for intellectual property showed a dramatic increase between 2020 and 2026, indicating that IP development returned to the U.S. after the implementation of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the head of a Washington-based think tank said.

Daniel Bunn, president and CEO of the Tax Foundation, presented a chart to those attending a tax conference hosted by the United States Council for International Business in Washington, D.C., that showed IP payments from Ireland to the U.S. between 2008 and 2026. Those payments, according to the illustration, were well below €10 trillion ($11.4 trillion) between 2008 and 2019 and then jumped to over €40 trillion by 2026.

The information, Bunn said, shows the effect of both the 2017 tax act, which, among other changes, lowered the top U.S. corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%  and the elimination of a popular tax planning strategy known as the double Irish Dutch sandwich. The structure, whereby European sales were routed through a head office with no employees or physical presence, was used by many large U.S. technology companies to avoid withholding taxes in Europe.

O'Reilly, deputy head of the OECD's tax policy and statistics division and head of its business and international taxes unit, addressed the impact of the global minimum tax, for which the first returns from companies are due at the end of the month. At this point, he said, it is too early to assess how well the regime is working.

Nearly 140 countries agreed to the 15% minimum tax, known as Pillar Two, in 2021, and a deal reached in January exempts the U.S. from the provision with the understanding that it imposes its own minimum tax requirements. The January agreement recognized that the U.S. tax regime — and potentially others — could operate "side by side" with Pillar Two.

O'Reilly said "Let's wait and see whether the rule … that we are now putting into place or happened in the last couple of years is really working," he said. "It's not time yet, because we have not yet seen the full effects of the rules that are in place."

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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Global Millionaire Migration Wave of 2026: Winners, Losers, and the Shifting Wealth Map

According to Henley Private Wealth Migration Report 2026, 2026 is shaping up to be a record-breaking year for millionaire migration internationally. The latest edition of this annual report introduces the Global Wealth Mobility Framework, revealing how tax, policy, geopolitics, and international access are reshaping the competition to attract millionaires on the move.

According to the report, Singapore, Italy, Switzerland, Greece, Hong Kong, and New Zealand are emerging as some of the most attractive destinations for internationally mobile wealth in 2026, while the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Norway, and South Korea are facing growing competitiveness pressures as tax reforms, fiscal uncertainty, and policy shifts prompt wealthy individuals and families to reassess their options.

At the same time, two wealth mobility flashpoints look set to reshape the geography of global wealth this year: the US, the world’s largest private wealth market and creator of new wealth, is also generating record demand for residence and citizenship optionality as affluent Americans seek international diversification in unprecedented numbers; and the Gulf, where ongoing conflict is testing the resilience of the region’s emerging wealth hubs, particularly the UAE — the leading destination for millionaire migration over the past two years — prompting a new phase of contingency planning among its internationally mobile residents.

The Big Picture: What Does It All Mean?

Millionaire migration is more than a trend—it’s a barometer of global confidence, policy effectiveness, and the shifting sands of economic opportunity. The fastest-growing wealth markets are often those that attract migrating millionaires or are emerging tech hubs, highlighting the crucial role of mobility in wealth creation.

As 2026 unfolds, the global map of wealth is being redrawn, one millionaire at a time.

According to CNBC the top reason why Americans abroad want to dump their U.S. citizenship include:

  • Nearly 1 in 4 American expatriates say they are “seriously considering” or “planning” to ditch their U.S. citizenship, a survey from Greenback Expat Tax Services finds.  
  • About 9 million U.S. citizens are living abroad, the U.S. Department of State estimates.
  • More than 4 in 10 who would renounce citizenship say it’s due to the burden of filing U.S. taxes, the Greenback poll shows.


Should I Stay or Should I Go?


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Friday, June 12, 2026

Federal Court Strikes Down Trump’s $100,000 H‑1B Fee: What Employers Need to Know Now

On June 8, 2026, a federal judge in Massachusetts vacated President Trump’s controversial $100,000 “fee” on certain H‑1B petitions, calling it an unauthorized tax on U.S. employers and setting it aside under the Administrative Procedure Act. The decision in State of California et al. v. Markwayne Mullin et al., Civil No. 25‑13829‑LTS, is a major win for employers that rely on high‑skilled foreign talent.

What was the $100,000 H‑1B fee?

In 2025, the administration issued a proclamation titled “Restriction on Entry of Certain Nonimmigrant Workers,” supported by DHS and USCIS guidance, that effectively imposed a $100,000 charge on certain H‑1B petitions. The payment applied to petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025 for H‑1B workers abroad without a valid H‑1B visa, including many cases forced into consular processing after USCIS denied a change of status, extension, or amendment.

Although labeled as a “monetary penalty,” the measure operated as a six‑figure, per‑petition cost on employers seeking to fill key roles with foreign professionals.

Why did the court strike it down?

Judge Leo Sorokin held that the $100,000 assessment is, in substance, a tax on U.S. employers rather than a regulatory fee or penalty. Under the Constitution, Congress—not the President—holds the taxing power, and the government could not point to any statute in the immigration laws that clearly delegates authority to impose this kind of tax.

Because the proclamation and implementing policy exceeded that authority, the court found them unlawful and set them aside under the APA. In short, the administration cannot use immigration powers to create a new revenue‑raising tax on H‑1B employers.

What does this mean for your H‑1B strategy?

For now, USCIS may not collect or enforce the $100,000 fee in any case covered by the decision, and the vacatur applies nationwide. Employers planning H‑1B hiring for the upcoming fiscal year, or managing consular‑processing cases for workers abroad, can move forward without budgeting for an extra $100,000 per petition under this policy.

The administration is expected to appeal, but there is no indication of any stay currently in place. That makes this a critical moment to reassess stalled hiring plans, dust off postponed petitions, and confirm that your immigration counsel is leveraging the ruling to eliminate unnecessary costs and delays.

Our take

This decision is a reminder that even in the immigration arena, there are constitutional limits on how far the executive branch can go in shifting tax burdens onto employers. If your company paused H‑1B filings because of the $100,000 assessment—or if you have questions about pending cases that were caught up in the proclamation—now is the time to revisit those decisions with experienced counsel.

Need Tax Advice ?


     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

Marini & Associates, P.A. 


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or
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)



Sources:

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2.      https://www.linkedin.com/posts/kevin-andrews-esquire_state-of-california-et-al-v-markwayne-mullin-activity-7470357757221838848-Oy1x

3.      https://www.murrayosorio.com/news/2026/june/district-court-judge-strikes-down-trump-s-100k-p/                    

4.      https://www.vitallaw.com/news/immigration-d-mass-president-s-100k-h-1b-visa-fee-struck-down-as-unauthorized-tax/eld0140b76471c80e49a8a30f26f6a6e28aed             

5.       https://cgrs.uclawsf.edu/en/our-work/litigation/ma-v-mullin

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16.   https://www.casemine.com/judgement/us/6a2a4305174bb89f9fdb1b67 

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26.  https://www.pce.uw.edu/news-features/articles/in-demand-marketing-roles