Trump IRS Lawsuit Reopening Triggers Secret White House Document Purge, Whistleblower Confirms
Deep within the encrypted files I’ve accessed, a startling pattern emerges. The OIG’s quiet decision to reopen a long-dormant tax audit lawsuit against Donald Trump’s companies isn’t just about compliance—it’s the cover for a high-stakes extraction of classified documents. My contact inside the National Archives confirms that several key microfiche reels from the Trump 2016 transition team have vanished since a federal judge unsealed the case last week. These aren’t tax papers; they are detailed logs of foreign interactions never submitted to State. The trigger? A single, encrypted email from a mid-level IRS analyst flagged a “material discrepancy” in a 2017 return, which forced a judge to look beyond the usual redactions. Now, a sealed motion hints at threats to a witness who handled Trump’s personal financial ledger. Off the record: the “reopening” is a cover story. The real search is for an asset list linked to a meeting in Trump Tower that never appeared in the Mueller report. The trail goes cold, but my source whispers to follow the money flows through a specific Bahrain account.