Trish Turner resigned from his head of the Digital Digital Digital Division Division (IRS) Digital Active after about three months in the role.
“After more than 20 years with the IRS, I closed an extraordinary chapter of my career with a deep appreciation for those who shaped my trip and made the work if significant,” said Turner in a Linkedin article on Friday.
“Together, we sailed on complex challenges, built sustainable programs and laid the foundations for the IRS digital asset strategy while it was going from the niche to the dominant current,” added Turner.
Turner would be moved to the private sector
Turner did not say in her article where she will then go, but explained that she looked “impatiently to continue this mission from a new point of view and to build bridges between industry and regulators”.
Bloomberg Tax reported on Friday that Turner said to the publication during an interview that she would become the tax director of the Crypto Crypto Tax Girl tax company. On the same day, the founder of the girl of the crypto-taxe Laura Walter said in an article Linkedin that Turner would join the company.
“With all the major changes in the tax and conformity of cryptography on the horizon, we are delighted to have Trish on board to help advise our customers,” said Walter.
The resignation of Turner occurs a little more than three months after being exploited to direct the division of digital assets in May, after the sulolit “Raj” Mukherjee and Seth Wilks, two experts in the private sector led to direct the crypto unit of the IRS, left after about a year in their roles.
The economist Timothy Peterson commented on the announcement, saying: “Trish Turner left the dark side to become a Jedi Crypto knight.”
Crypto tax has become a key goal in the United States
It follows the proposal of the Ministry of Government Effectiveness (DOGE) in March to reduce IRS work by 20% and several recent developments around American cryptographic taxation.
In relation: 5 countries where the crypto is (surprisingly) tax free in 2025
On July 11, Cointtelegraph reported that the Chamber of Chamber of Chamber of Tracks and Miders and Surveillance Sub-Comes said that they had planned a July hearing to focus on “the affirmative stages necessary to place a tax policy on digital assets”.
A few days before, on July 4, the Inspector General of the US Treasury for the Tax Administration recommended reforms to the management of digital assets by the IRS survey division, citing repeated failures to follow the established protocols.
Meanwhile, on April 11, US President Donald Trump signed a joint resolution of the congress reversing a rule of the Biden Administration era which would have required decentralized finance protocols (DEFI) to report transactions to IRS.
Cointelegraph holded out Trish Turner to comment but did not receive an answer at the time of publication.
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