President’s Trump’s recent nominee to a seat on the Federal Reserve owes the IRS $75,000 for taking improper deductions on his income taxes, Bloomberg reported Wednesday.

A federal tax lien filed in the circuit court for Montgomery County, Maryland, where Stephen Moore owns a home, said the government won a judgment against Moore for $75,328.80, the news service reported.

The January 2018 filing said it was for unpaid taxes from the 2014 tax year and could accrue more penalties and other costs.

Moore referred questions about the tax debt to his wife, Anne Carey, who said the dispute originated with a deduction on Moore’s 2014 tax return.

Moore, she said, accidentally claimed both his alimony and child-support payments to his ex-wife, when only alimony was deductible.

Because Moore had moved, he never received notifications from the IRS after the agency audited the return, she added.

She told Bloomberg she and Moore have now resolved to pay the lien as quickly as possible but will continue to press their dispute with the IRS.

“It was not an attempt at defrauding the US government,” Carey said.

Carey said the White House hasn’t voiced alarm about the tax lien.

Trump announced last week he would nominate Moore, a senior fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, for an open seat on the Fed’s board of governors.

The White House hasn’t yet officially submitted Moore’s nomination to the Senate, which must vote to confirm him.