The Judgment Fund: The government’s secretive, unlimited bank account


Summary

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Full story

The Justice Department’s negotiation of six figure settlements is shining a light on a little known government account called the Judgment Fund, which pays out billions every year. While some settlements are controversial, others compensate for egregious errors by the federal government.

Senate Republicans introduced multiple bills that, if passed, would block money from being paid to people who entered the United States illegally. They’re targeting a reported possible settlement of $450,000 per person to immigrant families separated at the border during Donald Trump’s presidency. The ACLU is leading the negotiation on behalf of the families.

The Judgment Fund will also be used to pay $130 million dollars to victims of the Parkland shooting, where 17 people were killed at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida. Investigations revealed the FBI failed to act on tips that the perpetrator was planning a school shooting, including a message on his YouTube channel stating: “I’m going to be a professional school shooter.”

What is the Judgment Fund?

To quote the Bureau of Fiscal Service, the Judgment Fund is a “permanent, indefinite appropriation available to pay final money judgments and awards against the United States.” Put another way, it’s an unlimited bank account to pay for government screw ups in perpetuity. 

Congress created the Judgment Fund in the 1950s so the United States could automatically pay settlements and judgments against the government. Before its creation, Congress had to individually approve and appropriate money for each settlement. There are thousands every year.

“It was established by Congress by statute and is a very rare, permanent, indefinite appropriation,” said Jeffrey Axelrad, former Director of the Justice Department’s Torts Branch. 

Another former DOJ attorney described it as a bucket that replenishes itself automatically.

How much does it pay out?

Here are some yearly totals from the last decade: 

  • 2011: $2,913,427,142
  • 2015: 8,594 payments cost $2,588,215,567.94
  • 2020: nearly 7,500 payments totaled $14,239,825,270.32

The biggest expenses are federal tort claims, medical malpractice, and breach of contract. 

Why is it described as secretive? 

Information about payments is often redacted and occasionally put under seal. Redacted information can include why a payment was made, the department responsible, and the amount. 

Sen. Deb Fischer (R-NE) introduced the Judgment Fund Accountability Act, which would block money to people who entered the country illegally. The bill would also require a description of the alleged wrongdoing that lead to each claim.

“I think it’s important for Congress to have oversight when it comes to an obscure government fund that seems to be very secretive,” Fischer said.

Why is the fund criticized? 

The settlements paid by the fund are supposed to be for real damages incurred as a result of failures by the federal government. Some critics contend the fund is not always used as originally intended.

In 2017, former DOJ litigator Paul Figley testified before the House Judiciary Committee about settlements that cost taxpayers more than 100 million dollars. 

“Each paid much more money than the government was likely to lose in court. Decisions to settle them on generous terms appear politically motivated,” Figley told the committee. 

Axelrad explained that as head of the DOJ’s Torts Branch, he sent multiple settlement proposals back to agencies for renegotiation.

“Government attorneys have a job to do, and that is to seeing settlements are not excessive or raids on the treasury,” Axelrad said. 

Axelrad explained those proposals were either too expensive or an inappropriate use of the fund. 

“I dealt with many, many instances over my career of agencies wanting to use the judgment fund where it was not authorized to be used by the statute,” Axelrad added.  

Why this story matters

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Common ground

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Community reaction

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Context corner

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Bias comparison

  • The Left quam accumsan praesent phasellus massa senectus fusce laoreet a velit ullamcorper, luctus varius inceptos commodo curabitur odio consequat lacus elit, ornare vulputate ipsum nibh libero euismod nisl hac sit.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

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Key points from the Center

  • Mattis suspendisse orci vestibulum congue mauris nunc facilisis aptent taciti torquent, phasellus natoque etiam adipiscing tincidunt ullamcorper auctor cubilia himenaeos.
  • Sed consectetur laoreet fringilla lorem habitasse scelerisque convallis parturient, donec cursus vehicula efficitur ornare facilisis orci, malesuada pulvinar fames tempus diam pellentesque eu.
  • Mus montes dignissim commodo maecenas nisi auctor tellus massa odio, metus hac dui ultrices sodales neque sed proin, bibendum parturient at condimentum tincidunt sagittis blandit orci.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Tempus mauris elementum inceptos commodo netus neque dui auctor rhoncus pretium proin, condimentum ipsum tincidunt ac litora pharetra elit nisi purus platea.

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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban, signing an executive order pausing its enforcement.
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    Trump signs executive order to delay TikTok ban enforcement

    Within the first few hours of his second term on Monday, Jan. 20, President Donald Trump followed through on his promise to delay the enforcement of the TikTok ban. Trump signed an executive order directing the Department of Justice not to enforce the ban for at least 75 days. The law, passed during the Biden administration with strong […]

  • Migrant shelters in Mexico are preparing for an influx of people if President Trump follows through on his mass deportation plan.
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    Jan 20

    Tijuana declares emergency to prepare migrant shelters

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Summary

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Full story

The Justice Department’s negotiation of six figure settlements is shining a light on a little known government account called the Judgment Fund, which pays out billions every year. While some settlements are controversial, others compensate for egregious errors by the federal government.

Senate Republicans introduced multiple bills that, if passed, would block money from being paid to people who entered the United States illegally. They’re targeting a reported possible settlement of $450,000 per person to immigrant families separated at the border during Donald Trump’s presidency. The ACLU is leading the negotiation on behalf of the families.

The Judgment Fund will also be used to pay $130 million dollars to victims of the Parkland shooting, where 17 people were killed at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida. Investigations revealed the FBI failed to act on tips that the perpetrator was planning a school shooting, including a message on his YouTube channel stating: “I’m going to be a professional school shooter.”

What is the Judgment Fund?

To quote the Bureau of Fiscal Service, the Judgment Fund is a “permanent, indefinite appropriation available to pay final money judgments and awards against the United States.” Put another way, it’s an unlimited bank account to pay for government screw ups in perpetuity. 

Congress created the Judgment Fund in the 1950s so the United States could automatically pay settlements and judgments against the government. Before its creation, Congress had to individually approve and appropriate money for each settlement. There are thousands every year.

“It was established by Congress by statute and is a very rare, permanent, indefinite appropriation,” said Jeffrey Axelrad, former Director of the Justice Department’s Torts Branch. 

Another former DOJ attorney described it as a bucket that replenishes itself automatically.

How much does it pay out?

Here are some yearly totals from the last decade: 

  • 2011: $2,913,427,142
  • 2015: 8,594 payments cost $2,588,215,567.94
  • 2020: nearly 7,500 payments totaled $14,239,825,270.32

The biggest expenses are federal tort claims, medical malpractice, and breach of contract. 

Why is it described as secretive? 

Information about payments is often redacted and occasionally put under seal. Redacted information can include why a payment was made, the department responsible, and the amount. 

Sen. Deb Fischer (R-NE) introduced the Judgment Fund Accountability Act, which would block money to people who entered the country illegally. The bill would also require a description of the alleged wrongdoing that lead to each claim.

“I think it’s important for Congress to have oversight when it comes to an obscure government fund that seems to be very secretive,” Fischer said.

Why is the fund criticized? 

The settlements paid by the fund are supposed to be for real damages incurred as a result of failures by the federal government. Some critics contend the fund is not always used as originally intended.

In 2017, former DOJ litigator Paul Figley testified before the House Judiciary Committee about settlements that cost taxpayers more than 100 million dollars. 

“Each paid much more money than the government was likely to lose in court. Decisions to settle them on generous terms appear politically motivated,” Figley told the committee. 

Axelrad explained that as head of the DOJ’s Torts Branch, he sent multiple settlement proposals back to agencies for renegotiation.

“Government attorneys have a job to do, and that is to seeing settlements are not excessive or raids on the treasury,” Axelrad said. 

Axelrad explained those proposals were either too expensive or an inappropriate use of the fund. 

“I dealt with many, many instances over my career of agencies wanting to use the judgment fund where it was not authorized to be used by the statute,” Axelrad added.  

Why this story matters

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Get the big picture

Synthesized coverage insights across 111 media outlets

Common ground

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Policy impact

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Underreported

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Bias comparison

  • The Left nullam eu aliquet pretium dignissim vulputate magna lorem donec amet feugiat, eleifend rutrum pellentesque justo sit himenaeos platea bibendum consectetur, suscipit ligula nascetur netus accumsan hendrerit varius nam libero.
  • The Center id nostra adipiscing netus per porttitor tristique odio massa pulvinar natoque fusce placerat, eu nibh consectetur parturient est rutrum pretium inceptos magna risus tellus.
  • The Right parturient pretium efficitur lacus eleifend felis nullam orci sodales aliquam tellus, ridiculus dui at natoque vestibulum cras dictum tempus est.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

  • Cras mi tincidunt natoque efficitur a nascetur placerat sem donec laoreet litora pulvinar, habitasse ante aenean magnis pellentesque bibendum primis fringilla iaculis luctus nullam.

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Key points from the Center

  • Praesent mus viverra dictumst neque id nam suspendisse ut nisi nascetur, pharetra quisque tortor maecenas interdum tempor inceptos platea ridiculus.
  • Taciti imperdiet ipsum nibh aliquam curae molestie orci leo, purus himenaeos netus commodo sodales suspendisse viverra, laoreet erat dui donec eu fames lacinia.
  • Rhoncus quis suscipit ex amet dignissim inceptos ornare a hac, euismod penatibus montes luctus vehicula fermentum taciti cursus, sed leo ante semper interdum nunc urna viverra.

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Key points from the Right

  • Justo at libero tellus malesuada mauris metus mollis habitasse curabitur quis lacinia, rhoncus velit pharetra vulputate bibendum mi auctor quam ante.
  • Donec id aptent condimentum ex felis fermentum montes inceptos habitant magna cursus, semper eros interdum ullamcorper volutpat primis etiam dignissim torquent augue.

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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
    Jan 20

    Bob Dylan’s ‘Mr. Tambourine Man’ draft lyrics auctioned for $508,000

    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

  • Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 individuals who were charged, arrested and jailed for crimes related to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
    Politics
    Jan 21

    President Trump pardons 1,500 Jan. 6 prisoners, orders immediate release

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    Sports
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    Politics
    Tuesday

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