HR-2347-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Lloyd Smucker (R-PA)
What it does
This bill would exclude from federal taxable income certain financial settlements or awards received by survivors of violent crimes or sexual offenses. It would prevent the IRS from treating such compensation — received through civil lawsuits, insurance, or other legal proceedings — as taxable income, meaning survivors would not owe federal income tax on those amounts.
Who benefits
Survivors of violent crimes and sexual offenses who receive civil settlements or legal awards. Attorneys and victim advocates who represent survivors in civil proceedings, as the tax exclusion may make pursuing civil claims more financially worthwhile. Nonprofit organizations that assist crime survivors, who may see increased demand for legal referral services. Survivors who previously settled and may benefit if any retroactive provisions apply.
Who is hurt
The federal government would forgo tax revenue on these settlements, shifting the fiscal burden to other taxpayers or increasing the deficit. High-income survivors who receive large settlements would receive a proportionally larger tax benefit than lower-income survivors, which some may view as inequitable. Survivors who received non-monetary compensation or who settled before the bill's effective date may not benefit, creating disparate treatment among similarly situated individuals.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that taxing compensation received by crime survivors effectively penalizes victims twice — once by the crime itself, and again by the government taking a share of the damages meant to make them whole. They contend that existing law already excludes physical injury settlements from taxation under IRC §104, but that gaps in that provision leave many survivors of sexual offenses and other violent crimes exposed to tax liability on their awards, and that this bill closes that gap to ensure all survivors are treated equitably.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the tax code already provides meaningful exclusions for physical injury and sickness settlements, and that expanding exclusions further creates complexity and potential for abuse, as the definition of "survivor" or qualifying offense could be difficult to administer and verify. They contend that targeted tax exclusions for specific categories of litigants set a precedent for carving up the tax base by sympathetic circumstance, and that the lost revenue — however modest — must be offset elsewhere or added to the deficit.