Amy Dalrymple, editor-in-chief, North Dakota Monitor, left, and Stephen Engelberg, editor-in-chief, ProPublica | NorthDakotaMonitor.com / ProPublica.org
Amy Dalrymple, editor-in-chief, North Dakota Monitor, left, and Stephen Engelberg, editor-in-chief, ProPublica | NorthDakotaMonitor.com / ProPublica.org
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan has requested documents from Attorney General Pam Bondi related to the prosecution of a former IRS contractor who leaked President Donald Trump's tax records to media outlets including ProPublica—a partner of the North Dakota Monitor which, in turn, publishes news articles in the Bismarck Tribune.
Charles E. Littlejohn confessed to leaking information on over 400,000 taxpayers, including Trump, and 73,000 businesses during the Biden-Harris administration to news outlets The New York Times and ProPublica.
In a June 3 letter to Bondi, Jordan argues the scale of the breach was much larger than initially disclosed under the Biden administration and that new information from the IRS has come to light under the Trump administration.
Jordan also said the Biden administration's accountability was inadequate—Littlejohn was charged with only one felony count, resulting in a five-year sentence. The sentencing judge had concerns over the leniency of Littlejohn's plea deal, Jordan's letter notes.
Jordan is now requesting that the Justice Department produce all internal communications and documents relating to decisions made about Littlejohn’s charges, the plea agreement, and related investigations, with a June 17 deadline for the Department to deliver.
Back in February, IRS Acting Commissioner Douglas O’Donnell sent a letter to Jordan that said 405,427 taxpayers—including individuals and businesses—had their tax information unlawfully accessed and leaked by Littlejohn, a contractor, between 2018 and 2020.
Littlejohn pleaded guilty to unauthorized disclosure of tax returns and was sentenced to five years in prison in January 2024.
On September 28, 2020, The New York Times published a report detailing two decades of Trump’s tax returns based on Littlejohn's leak.
Littlejohn later leaked a broader set of IRS data, including Trump’s records, to ProPublica, which used it for its June 2021 “Secret IRS Files” series.
In the Feb. letter, O’Donnell said the IRS “has mailed notifications to 405,427 taxpayers whose returns and/or return information was disclosed by Mr. Littlejohn.”
Neither ProPublica nor The New York Times have faced public legal action over publishing the illegally-leaked tax records.
Founded in 2007, ProPublica “is the creation of Herbert M. and Marion O. Sandler,” reported The New York Times. The Sandlers are a N.C. couple who Time magazine ranked among “25 people to blame from the (2008) financial crisis.” They originally committed $10 million a year to ProPublica, reported the Times.
Eighty-four percent of ProPublica’s readers identify as liberal, according to a 2018 ProPublica survey of its own readers, and 33 percent of the outlet’s readers say the group’s reporting is liberal.
North Dakota Monitor announced in July 2024 that it was joining ProPublica’s “Local Reporting Network.”
The Monitor is part of the “States Newsroom” network, a nonprofit that operates a network of state-focused news outlets across the United States. States Newsroom describes itself as a “progressive political journalism startup,” according to a January 2020 LinkedIn job posting.
States Newsroom was “launched with the backing of the Hopewell Fund, another liberal dark-money group,” reported “NewsGuard” correspondent Gabby Deutch in a Feb. 2020 Washington Post piece.
North Dakota Monitor's current editor-in-chief, Amy Dalrymple, was previously the editor of the Bismarck Tribune, which has published more than twenty articles with North Dakota Monitor bylines between Feb. 1 and Feb. 26, 2025.
The Tribune also has published at least two articles with ProPublica bylines thus far in 2025.
The U.S. House Judiciary Committee posted on X that O’Donnell’s letter to the committee about the illegal leak to ProPublica “confirms the Committee’s suspicion and recent reports that show the scope of the leak was much broader than what the Biden Administration’s IRS initially led the public to believe.”
“This is a MASSIVE scandal,” said the committee at the time.