Legal Sidebari
Suspending the Tax-Exempt Status of Terrorist
and Terrorist Supporting Organizations: H.R.
6408 in Context
June 7, 2024
H.R. 6408 would establish a process for suspending the tax-exempt status of organizations if the
Secretary of the Treasury designates them as “terrorist supporting organizations.” The suspended
organizations would then be subject to income tax and unable to receive tax-deductible contributions. The
House Ways and Means Committe
e reported on the bill on December 19, 2023, and it passed the House
on April 15, 2024. The Senate i
s currently considering the bill, which has been referred to the Senate
Committee on Finance. An identical bill was introduced in the Senate on April 17, 2024, as
S. 4136.
H.R. 6408 seeks t
o amend Secti
on 501(p) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), which currently suspends
the tax-exempt status of “terrorist organizations.”
H.R. 6408 would create a separate category of
“terrorist
supporting organizations” with different suspension and review procedures than those currently in place
for terrorist organizations.
This Legal Sidebar describes the Section 501(p) procedure for suspending the tax-exempt status of
terrorist organizations, explains how
H.R. 6408 would create a different process to suspend the tax-
exempt status of terrorist supporting organizations, identifies existing legal authority under which the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) already can revoke the tax-exempt status of organizations that materially
support terrorist organizations, and summarizes the debate over
H.R. 6408.
The Section 501(p) Process
Secti
on 501(p) of the IRC currently provides a process to suspend the tax-exempt status of terrorist
organizations
. “Terrorist organizations” are defined as organization
s designated or defined as such under
other laws, including th
e Immigration and Nationality Act and Section 140(d)(2) of th
e Foreign Relations
Authorization Act, FY1988 and 1989, or designated by an executive order issued pursuant to the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act or the
United Nations Participation Act of 1945.
The suspension of tax-exempt status
begins automatically on the date of the designation (or, for already
designated terrorist organizations, on November 11, 2003—th
e date of enactment of section 501(p)). The
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suspensio
n continues until the designation is rescinded. When the tax-exempt status of a terrorist
organization is suspended,
no deduction for charitable contributions to the terrorist organization is
allowed.
Secti
on 501(p)(5) denies administrative or judicial review of both the suspension and denial of deduction.
Some recourse is available for
erroneous designation through a credit or refund for any overpayment of
tax resulting from the error. The IRS publishes
a list of organizations whose tax exemption is suspended
under Section 501(p).
While it may seem improbable that a terrorist organization, wanting to operate covertly, could pursue and
maintain tax-exempt status, some suspended terrorist organizations—for example, the
Global Relief
Foundation—engaged in ostensibly legitimate charitable activity until they were designated as terrorist
organizations.
H.R. 6408
H.R. 6408 would
amend Secti
on 501(p) to create a separate category of “terrorist supporting
organizations.”
“Terrorist supporting organization” is defined as any organization designated by the
Secretary of the Treasury as having provided material support to a terrorist organization in the prior three
years.
Providing material support is defined by reference t
o criminal law as “knowingly provid[ing]
material support or resources to a foreign terrorist organization, or attempt[ing] or conspir[ing] to do so.”
An organization would recei
ve written notice prior to being designated a terrorist supporting organization
and 90 days after notice to either
contest the allegations underlying the proposed designation or t
o cure
the material support by making a reasonable effort to get the support returned and certifying it will not
provide any further support. The designati
on will be made if the organization does not contest or cure the
potential designation within the 90-day period. The designation must
be rescinded if, and only if, (1) the
designation was erroneous; (2) the organization did not receive the notice, and either demonstrates that it
did not provide material support to a terrorist organization or makes reasonable efforts to recover the
support and certifies that it will not provide any further support; or (3) the terrorist organization to which
material support was provided is no longer suspended from tax exemption.
Administrative review of a designation as a terrorist supporting organization is available with t
he IRS
Independent Office of Appeals (IRS Appeals). A federal district court c
an judicially review a “final
determination” of an organization’s designation. The proposed amendment in
H.R. 6408 does not define
“final determination,” but says that
a final determination does not require use of IRS Appeals. Thus, the
organization does not have to go through IRS Appeals to exhaust administrative remedies before seeking
judicial review of the designation, as is the case i
n other IRS determinations.
The period of suspension for terrorist supporting organizations would be the same as it is for terrorist
organizations. The suspensi
on begins upon designation as a terrorist supporting organization and ends
upon rescission of the designation. As with terrorist organizations, no deduction for charitable
contributions to terrorist supporting organizations would be allowed.
Existing IRS Enforcement Authority
Tax-exempt organizations under Secti
on 501 of the IRC are subject to existing requirements that enable
the IRS to revoke the tax-exempt status of an organization that provides material support to a terrorist
organization.
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First, charitable organizations under Secti
on 501(c)(3) are subject to the requirement that their purposes
and activities cannot
be illegal or
contrary to public policy. Because providing material support to terrorist
organizations i
s illegal, the IRS could revoke a 501(c)(3) organization’s tax-exempt status for doing so.
Second, some organizations under Secti
on 501, includi
ng 501(c)(3) organizations, must be operated
exclusively for certain enumerated exempt purposes. The IRS could find that providing material support
to a terrorist organization is contrary to an organization’s exempt purposes, justifying revocation of its
tax-exempt status.
On at least
one occasion, the IRS has revoked the tax-exempt status of a 501(c)(3) organization suspected
of supporting a terrorist organization. The IRS revoked the organization’s exempt status when public
sources indicated that the organization had provided support to a terrorist organization and the
organization failed to show that its money had been used exclusively for charitable purposes. The IRS
also explained that the organization’s activities violated law and public policy.
As the House Ways and Means Committee’s report
explains, such existing revocation authority is
exercised after
examination—or audit—of the organization and the provision of notic
e, administrative
appeal, and judicial review.
One difference between enforcement under existing IRS authority and the process proposed i
n H.R. 6408
is that revocation under existing authority comes after examination, whereas under
H.R. 6408 it would
come after designation as a terrorist supporting organization. The rules and regulations the Department of
the Treasury (Treasury Department) would promulgate for the criteria and procedure for designation
might differ from the existing IRS examination procedure. These potential differences could result in
differences in the incidence of revocation.
Debate on H.R. 6408 and Considerations for Congress
H.R. 6408 was introduce
d in the wake of the October 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel by Hamas and
congressional testimony about fundraising by foreign terrorist organizations and their receipt of material
support from tax-exempt organizations. In the debate that preceded the House vote on April 15, 2024,
some Members supporting the bill
referenced the October 7 terrorist attack as well as the Iranian missile
attack on Israel that occurred shortly before the debate. The supporters claimed that the bill would
empower the Treasury Department to revoke the tax-exempt status of terrorist supporting organizations
and disrupt terrorism financing. One Member offered that the bill would also provide “thoughtful
safeguards to protect due process” during the suspension process.
While no Member spoke against the bill in th
e House debate, there are opponents who have expressed
concern that the proposed suspension process “could be used t
o target politically disfavored nonprofits,”
including “nonprofit groups that are supportive of a cease‐fire in the Israel‐Hamas war or who are
otherwise rhetoricall
y supportive of the Palestinians or even seeking to provide humanitarian aid to
people in Gaza.” Other opponents argue that the legislation i
s unnecessary because providing material
support to terrorist organizations is already a federal crime, and the bill would give the Treasury
Department excessive authority. Groups representi
ng humanitarian charities an
d Muslim civil rights have
expressed opposition to the bill.
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Author Information
Justin C. Chung
Legislative Attorney
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