Attempts to Reform Litigation Funding

 Changes to the taxes paid by litigation investors did not make it in the final version of the expansive One Big B



eautiful Bill, but the issue of third-party litigating funding continues to have the attention of at least some lawmakers in Washington.


Rep. Darell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial Intellige


nce, and the Internet, held a hearing on July 22 entitled “Foreign Abuse of U.S. Courts.”


Related: Tax Increase on Litigation Funders Does Not Make Final Budget Bill


Issa in February introduced the Litigation Transparency Act of 2025 (HR 1109) that would require disclosur


e of third-party litigation funding (TPLF) in federal civil cases.


During the hearing, Issa said the Chinese Communist Party i


s “waging what they call legal warfare, using the U.S. courts,” eclipsing cyber and spying threats the U.S. faces from China.


“This is using our patent system, our trademark system, and our courts to their advantage,” he said. “Legislation and


rule changes by the administration need to happen, and happen now.”


Industry trade association the American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA), who has made TPLF refor


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m a top priority, submitted a statement to the subcommittee


“TPLF poses a major risk to America’s civil justice system and its economic and national security,” said San Whitfi


eld, APCIA’s senior vice president of federal government relations. “This rapidly growing practice inflates the cost of litigation, particularly the growth of


non-economic damages. These increased litigation costs impact the cost of living for consumers and businesses, including insurance costs.”


According to a new consumer guide on legal system abuse from the Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I


) and Munich Re US, legal system abuse costs each American family about $6,664 more for goods and services, and costs small businesses $160 billion in tort costs.


“TPLF allows hedge funds and other financiers, including sovereign wealth funds and foreign interests, to secretly invest in and potentially control lawsuits within the U.S. in exchange for a profit by claiming a healthy percentage of any settlement or award,” according to Whitfield, who added support for Issa’s bill as well as another, Protecting Our Courts from Foreign Manipulation Act of 2025 (HR 2675), introduced in April by Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va.

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