DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Sen. Jim Justice, wife to pay $5 million in back taxes to settle IRS suit

November 25, 2025
in News
Sen. Jim Justice, wife to pay $5 million in back taxes to settle IRS suit

Sen. Jim Justice (R-West Virginia) and his wife agreed to pay over $5 million in unpaid income taxes that the Internal Revenue Service said dated back to 2009.

According to court filings Monday, the agreement was struck hours after the Justice Department filed a lawsuit against Justice and his wife, Cathy, seeking $5,164,739.75 in unpaid federal income tax assessments owed as of August. The civil complaint said the debt originated from the 2009 tax year and included penalties and interest accrued since.

Attorneys for all parties signed a joint motion stating that the couple agreed to pay the full amount in addition to statutory interest. The motion, which needs to be approved by a judge, did not say when the money would be paid. Justice’s Senate office and an attorney representing the couple did not immediately respond to a request for comment early Tuesday.

Justice, 74, long been a fixture in West Virginia’s political and business scenes, coming from a prominent coal-mining family. In 2016, he was elected as the state’s governor as a Democrat, before switching to the Republican Party the following year. In 2024, after Justice had completed the maximum two consecutive terms permitted as governor, he replaced Joe Manchin III (D) as U.S. senator for West Virginia.

According to Forbes, Justice sold a collection of his most profitable West Virginia coal mines to Mechel, a Russian firm, for hundreds of millions of dollars in 2009. The lucrative sale propelled him onto the magazine’s list of billionaires until 2021, but his fortunes soon shifted as his liabilities mounted in the form of personally guaranteed bank loans, debt, court judgments and environmental liabilities. In January, Forbes estimated that Justice’s liabilities exceeded his assets.

Politico reported last month that the IRS filed notices of a tax lien against Justice and his wife, saying they owed more than $8 million. In a news briefing last month, Justice suggested that the IRS’s claims against him were politically motivated and said that much of the owed money was due to interest and penalties accruing on a “few dollars” that the IRS said he owed.

“It’s more of a political move but at the same time it’s just a situation that big companies deal with all the time,” Justice said. In August and September, local outlets also reported that the West Virginia Tax Division filed tax claims totaling over $1.3 million against hotel and sporting companies belonging to Justice.

The post Sen. Jim Justice, wife to pay $5 million in back taxes to settle IRS suit appeared first on Washington Post.

Basic economy just keeps getting worse
News

Why do airlines hate basic economy passengers?

by Washington Post
March 8, 2026

Since December, my American Airlines membership account has been frozen at 55,361 miles. And so it will remain as another ...

Read more
News

Opinion: I Could Have Been Trump’s First Congressional Endorsement. Now I’m One of His Biggest Critics

March 8, 2026
News

I moved 13 times over 15 years to advance my career. I would never wish this on anyone.

March 8, 2026
News

Inside Elon Musk’s vision of the future, where robots do everything and humans don’t work: Utopia or ‘dystopian hellhole’?

March 8, 2026
News

‘This is why Republicans are scared’: Reporter shows why Dem has a chance to flip key seat

March 8, 2026
A woman transformed her open-concept space with a pony wall for $2,500

A woman transformed her open-concept space with a pony wall for $2,500

March 8, 2026
On ‘S.N.L.’, Pete Hegseth Says Iran ‘Isn’t a War, It’s a Situationship’

On ‘S.N.L.’, Pete Hegseth Says Iran ‘Isn’t a War, It’s a Situationship’

March 8, 2026
Horrified by the state of the union, he’s an angry protester. But he’s also optimistic

Horrified by the state of the union, he’s an angry protester. But he’s also optimistic

March 8, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026