FBI-IRS Tag Team Hits Charities

Washington’s tax and terrorism tools are now being aimed at nonprofit groups—raising high-stakes questions about whether public safety enforcement can be tightened without letting vague “domestic terrorism” labels swallow lawful political advocacy.

Quick Take

  • A 2025 presidential directive, NSPM-7, set federal agencies on a path to scrutinize whether tax-exempt nonprofits financed or supported domestic terrorism or organized political violence.
  • The framework links IRS tax enforcement with FBI/JTTF counterterrorism investigations, including looking back roughly five years at activity and networks described in the research.
  • Congressional Republicans have pressed the IRS to review specific organizations, while nonprofit-sector groups warn that broad definitions could chill protected speech and association.
  • Research available publicly describes directives, letters, and legal risk analysis—but does not confirm specific IRS revocations or completed FBI cases tied to the memo.

What NSPM-7 Changes: Tax Status Meets Counterterror Investigations

President Trump’s September 25, 2025 National Security Presidential Memorandum 7 (NSPM-7) directed multiple agencies to focus on “domestic terrorism and organized political violence,” including potential misuse of nonprofit structures. The research summary indicates the IRS Commissioner was instructed to ensure tax-exempt entities do not finance political violence, with referrals to DOJ as warranted. The same framework points the FBI and Joint Terrorism Task Force toward deeper investigative reviews intended to map networks and funding pathways.

Unlike routine nonprofit audits, the approach described in the research ties charitable compliance to national security-style tools and interagency coordination. The research also notes attention to whether nonprofits could trigger related enforcement theories, including Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) concerns and other financial crime pathways. That matters because once activity is framed through a terrorism lens, agencies can pursue more aggressive investigative steps than ordinary tax compliance would typically justify.

Who’s in the Spotlight: Letters, Referrals, and Named Groups

The current wave is not described as a single, neatly packaged “original story,” but as a buildup of directives and congressional pressure. The research cites House activity pressing the IRS to review groups and, in early 2026, a Ways and Means request tied to a CAIR-California review. The research also lists nonprofits repeatedly mentioned in congressional inquiries and public debate, including CAIR, Jewish Voice for Peace, the Tides Foundation, the People’s Forum, and the Sixteen Thirty Fund.

Several of the public-facing allegations described in the research come through letters and political statements rather than court-tested findings. That distinction is critical for readers who want accountability without sacrificing due process. A letter can trigger oversight, but it is not proof. At the same time, conservatives who watched nonprofits become pipelines for political spending during the “dark money” era will recognize why Congress is pushing for clarity on what tax exemption should—and should not—subsidize.

Bondi’s DOJ Posture: Broader Guidance, More Referrals

The research points to a December 4, 2025 memo from Attorney General Pam Bondi that expanded investigative guidance related to domestic terrorism and political violence, with an emphasis on referrals and coordination. In practical terms, the posture described is designed to move beyond rhetoric and into case-building: if an organization’s conduct crosses legal lines, the government is urged to treat it as more than an administrative compliance issue. That approach aligns with longstanding conservative concerns about equal application of the law.

The research also reflects a central tension: expanding definitions can produce more enforcement, but it can also create ambiguity. If “domestic terrorism” is applied too broadly, it risks pulling constitutionally protected advocacy into investigative dragnet logic. The available materials do not resolve where the government will draw that line in practice, and they do not document a finished set of enforcement outcomes. That uncertainty is why the debate is likely to intensify as investigations proceed.

Enforcement vs. First Amendment: The Chilling-Effect Warning

Nonprofit-sector organizations and legal analysts cited in the research warn about a “chilling effect,” especially when government reviews look back multiple years and examine broad networks of donors, partners, and affiliates. From a constitutional standpoint, conservatives should care about that risk even when the targets are ideological opponents. Freedom of speech and association are not “progressive” ideas—they are American ones. Investigations must be rooted in clear statutes, credible evidence, and narrow tailoring.

At the same time, the research outlines why the policy has political traction: if any tax-exempt structure is used to finance violence, launder money, or act as an undeclared foreign influence vehicle, taxpayers should not be forced to underwrite it through favorable status. The strongest takeaway from the available research is not that any specific group has been legally proven guilty, but that Washington has built an interlocking enforcement architecture. How carefully it’s applied will determine whether it protects citizens—or sets precedents future administrations could weaponize.

Sources:

Understanding Trump’s War on Nonprofits

Congressional Investigations

Government Scrutiny of Nonprofits Intensifies

Practical Advice for Nonprofits and Donors After the Presidential Memorandum on Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence and Reported IRS Enforcement Changes

Threats and Bluster: The IRS’s Black Cloud Over the Nonprofit Sector

Council of Nonprofits (print PDF node/1859)

Jan 2026 Update: False Claim Act Lawsuits—What Nonprofits Need to Know

Why It Matters: The Escalated and Unwarranted Targeting of the Nonprofit Sector