You’ll need to go to Google or your favorite search engine to find her, but she gives her name (now sometimes rendered as “Cinnamon”) to one who should’a gotten recognition as part of IRS’ winning team back in March. The opinion is Anthony A. Klein and Barbara N. Klein, T. C. Memo. 2026-29, filed back on 3/30/26. but now corrected as at 7/7/26.
I blogged the case as “Blowing Smoke,” 3/30/26, but you needn’t either reread my blogpost, nor read Judge Elizabeth A. (“Tex”) Copeland’s corrected fourteen (count ’em, fourteen) pages.
Judge Tex Copeland has kindly provided a one-page Order of even date herewith that tells the whole story.
The corrected T. C. Memo. “reflects the following revision on page 1: “Brian J. Sullivan and James H. Wonzy, for respondent.” is substituted with the following: “Keziah Dutchak-Leonard, Brian J. Sullivan, and James H. Wonzy, for respondent.” Order, at p. 1.
Sorry to nitpick, Judge, but I think James H.’s handle is “Wozny,” and not “Wonzy.”
Btw, Keziah, Job’s middle daughter, is a symbol of woman’s equality. See Job 42:14-15. She and her sisters get equal shares in Dad’s estate, rare back then.