HR-1868-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by J. Hill (R-AR)
What it does
This bill would amend the Internal Revenue Code to automatically pause tax deadlines for U.S. nationals who are officially designated as unlawfully or wrongfully detained abroad, or held hostage abroad. During the period of detention or captivity, no late fees, interest, or penalties would accrue on their tax obligations. It would also establish a program to refund or cancel penalties already paid by qualifying individuals — and their spouses and dependents — for tax years going back to January 1, 2021, and require the IRS, State Department, and Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell to coordinate annually to identify and notify eligible individuals.
Who benefits
U.S. nationals officially designated as wrongfully detained or held hostage abroad, and their spouses and dependents, who would be relieved of tax penalties accrued during captivity. Families of hostages who file jointly or share tax obligations. Individuals detained before this bill's enactment who paid penalties as far back as January 1, 2021, who could receive retroactive refunds. Advocacy organizations focused on hostage recovery, who have sought this type of relief. Indirectly, the bill may benefit future detainees by establishing a standing legal mechanism that does not require case-by-case congressional action.
Who is hurt
The U.S. Treasury would forgo a small amount of penalty and interest revenue from a narrow population. IRS, State Department, and Department of Justice (through the Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell) would bear administrative costs to build and maintain the required coordination systems and databases by the January 1, 2026 deadline. Taxpayers who were detained but not formally designated under the Robert Levinson Act's specific criteria would not qualify, potentially excluding some individuals in ambiguous detention situations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that it is fundamentally unjust to penalize Americans for missing tax deadlines when they are physically unable to comply due to being held captive by a foreign government or non-state actor. They contend that existing law already provides this relief for military personnel in combat zones under IRC §7508, and that hostages and wrongful detainees face an equally involuntary and extreme circumstance. The bill has bipartisan sponsorship and mirrors protections already extended to service members, making it a straightforward equity correction for a small, clearly defined population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's retroactive refund provision — reaching back to January 1, 2021 — creates administrative complexity and potential due process questions about reopening settled tax assessments. They contend that existing IRS penalty abatement procedures, including reasonable cause relief, already give the IRS discretion to waive penalties for taxpayers who can demonstrate they were unable to comply, and that a new statutory mandate may be redundant while adding bureaucratic coordination requirements across three federal agencies with a tight implementation deadline.