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Tens of millions of dollars that ABC, Meta, X and Paramount paid to settle Donald Trump's lawsuits, intended for his future presidential library, allegedly ended up in a fund that quietly dissolved in Florida without any public disclosure of where the money went.
Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), together with Representative Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), sent formal letters on March 11, 2026 to the chief executives of all four companies demanding answers about the terms of their deals and the current location of the pledged funds.
Their inquiry centres on the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Fund, Inc., a Florida-registered nonprofit incorporated on Dec. 20, 2024 specifically to receive settlement donations, which was administratively dissolved by Florida's Department of State in September 2025 after the organisation failed to submit a mandatory annual report.
A successor entity, the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation, Inc., has since reported receiving £39.4 million ($50 million) in contributions, but it has not publicly confirmed whether that sum includes the corporate settlement payments, leaving what the lawmakers describe as a £49.7 million ($63 million) accountability gap at the heart of a sitting president's fundraising apparatus.
Four Lawsuits, Four Settlements and One Vanished Fund
The chain of settlements began on Dec. 13, 2024, when ABC News, owned by Disney, agreed to pay £11.8 million ($15 million) to resolve a defamation claim Trump had brought against the network and its anchor George Stephanopoulos.
The settlement agreement, filed in the Southern District of Florida, specified that the payment would be made as a charitable contribution 'to a Presidential foundation and museum to be established by or for' Trump. Six days later, attorney Jacob Roth, a Florida-based lawyer at the Dhillon Law Group, the firm founded by Trump's then-nominated assistant attorney general for civil rights Harmeet Dhillon, incorporated the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Fund, Inc.
Meta followed. On Jan. 29, 2025, President Trump signed a £19.7 million ($25 million) settlement with Meta in the Oval Office, resolving his lawsuit over the suspension of his Facebook and Instagram accounts after the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot.
Approximately £17.3 million ($22 million) of that total was directed toward his presidential library fund, with the remainder covering legal fees and co-plaintiffs. Meta confirmed the settlement but did not admit wrongdoing.
Taken together, using the figures publicly reported at the time of each settlement, the four deals have a combined gross value of approximately £52 million ($66 million), with the library-directed portions totalling at least £49.7 million ($63 million) according to Warren's analysis. Lawmakers say that amount cannot currently be accounted for.
The Dissolution
Florida's Division of Corporations records show the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Fund, Inc. was last active in February 2025, when it filed the sole piece of paperwork it ever submitted. It did not file the mandatory annual report required to maintain active status, and Florida officials administratively dissolved it on Sept. 26, 2025.
OpenSecrets first reported the dissolution in October 2025. On Dec. 29, 2025, Jacob Roth, the attorney who incorporated the fund, filed formal articles of dissolution. Reached by phone by OpenSecrets, Roth declined to comment beyond saying, 'My job is simply to be the registrant.' He agreed to forward questions to unspecified fund officials. The Dhillon Law Group did not respond to multiple press inquiries about the dissolution.
A separate nonprofit, the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation, Inc., had meanwhile been formed in 2025 by a different incorporator. The foundation reported in December 2025 that it had received £39.4 million ($50 million) in contributions.
Its trustee, lawyer James D. Kiley, did not respond to press questions about the source of those funds. The foundation itself also did not respond to inquiries. Federal rules do not require presidential library nonprofits to disclose their donors, meaning that even if all settlement funds flowed into the foundation, rather than the dissolved fund, there would be no mandatory disclosure mechanism to confirm it.
'The Fund is now gone, and the public has no clarity about the current location or purpose of the funds provided by ABC or any other source,' the three lawmakers wrote in their letters, copies of which were published on Warren's Senate website. They have requested that the chief executives of ABC, Meta, X and Paramount provide full written answers by March 23, 2026, including the precise amounts transferred, the recipient of those transfers, and whether the companies were notified that the fund was being dissolved.
Patel be pillow-talkingThought she was a fake country music artist wtf is she tweeting this ?
I’m tired of this vague shit! Tell us what the fuck it was or stfu.
Missed flights from minorities are going to spike for bullshit reasons