President Donald Trump's sons are being pressed by Senate Democrats over whether a deal struck by their father's administration shields them and their companies from prosecution for financial crimes.
Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., executive vice presidents of the Trump Organization, were among the recipients pressed to say whether the settlement gives them and their businesses immunity from prosecution.

The probe spans 11 Trump-affiliated companies in all.
The letters were sent by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), and Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee.
"…on its face it could give you and your business empire a broad and valuable get-out-of-jail-free card for any financial crimes or misconduct," the senators wrote directly to Donald Trump's sons.
That deal was a May settlement that resolved President Donald Trump's $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over leaked tax records. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche signed a one-page addendum declaring the government "forever barred and precluded" from examining or prosecuting the Trump family and affiliated businesses for anything before May 19, 2026 — and the senators spelled out exactly what that covers.
"Such enforcement actions could include investigations or prosecutions of a broad array of financial crimes, including tax crimes," they wrote.
The deal does not spell out who counts as "affiliated," a gap the senators are demanding the companies address.
"Under the guise of a so-called legal settlement, the Trump administration has attempted to decree that the President, his family, and their entire business empire — potentially including entities with even the vaguest 'affiliation' to the family — are to face zero consequences if they have committed a range of financial crimes or misdeeds — regardless of the severity of the violation," the senators explained.
Thirty-five former federal judges — appointed by presidents of both parties — called the deal "a fraud on the court."
"[Donald Trump] essentially gave himself a civil pardon so he can sort of be — have sort of blanket immunity both on the criminal side and on the civil side," former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann told National Public Radio.
The senators demanded answers from Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. by July 20.
"The public deserves transparency about the scope of this get-of-jail-free card, and about whether you intend to rely on this settlement as a free pass for any possible violations of the law," the senators concluded.


