United States v. Stone et al

  1. July 15, 2022

    Roger Stone, Wife Agree To Pay $2M To Resolve Tax Case

    Roger Stone and his wife have agreed to owing more than $2 million to the IRS to settle a suit alleging the associate of former President Donald Trump hid income from the U.S., they told a Florida federal court Friday.

  2. June 14, 2022

    Roger Stone Ordered To Turn Over Tax Records, Financial Info

    Roger Stone must furnish tax records and answer questions about financial accounts after a federal judge Tuesday ordered him and his wife to comply with document and information requests from the U.S. in its $2 million tax case against them.

  3. November 23, 2021

    Mueller Inquiry Led To Roger Stone's Tax Troubles, Court Told

    The IRS is wrongly pursuing Roger Stone over taxes he couldn't pay due to the financial strain caused by former special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian election interference, Stone told a Florida federal court in the $2 million case.

  4. November 01, 2021

    Roger Stone Asks Court To Resume His $2M Tax Case

    Roger Stone, an ally of former President Donald Trump, asked a Florida federal court to reopen the government's case accusing him of owing $2 million in taxes following a 90-day pause in the proceedings for his spouse's cancer treatment.

  5. June 17, 2021

    Judge Pauses Roger Stone's $2M Tax Case For 90 Days

    A Florida federal judge issued a 90-day stay in the government's suit accusing Roger Stone, an ally of former President Donald Trump, of owing nearly $2 million in taxes, according to an order entered Thursday.

  6. June 16, 2021

    Magistrate Assigned To Roger Stone's $2M Tax Case Recuses

    A U.S. magistrate judge assigned to Roger Stone's $2 million unpaid tax suit in Florida recused himself from the case Wednesday.

  7. April 16, 2021

    Roger Stone, Wife Owe $2M Tax Debt, Feds Say

    Roger Stone, an associate of former President Donald Trump, and his wife owe late taxes, penalties and interest totaling nearly $2 million, according to a suit the U.S. government filed Friday in a Florida federal court.