News Focus
News Focus
icon url

Zorax

02/13/25 6:08 PM

#512712 RE: janice shell #512709

Interesting. I didn't really see that coming. So they can just keep putting minions in those spots until the entire department is nazi slaves? Sounds like the plan.

Shittypants said it right in public that he will do everything he can as an executive order because he doesn't believe he has to wait and his power allows him to. Whether or not he believes this, it's quite obvoius he is trying everything he wants put out by executive order to see if it sticks. He'll wait it out. In the meantime it does a couple of things. It keeps him in the daily, literally hourly limelight and creates stress which he seems to need as a ego fix. It's very sick needing to torture people for his own enlightenment.

I think that's called being a true sadist.

The 90 day 2025 playbook could be driving this as well, if that's an actual tenant.
icon url

DesertDrifter

02/13/25 6:13 PM

#512714 RE: janice shell #512709

All the newest appointments to federal jobs are getting axed at 3 p.m. today. ( probationary employees are easiest to fire since they have fewer rights) And the court cases will begin... Many of the newest hires are fire hires... Fire all the fresh strong youngsters and hope the old guys can put out the fires. What a plan. Getting fired during the day and being informed to clean out your desk by the end of the day is certainly a great morale booster. The best and brightest will not return.

icon url

fuagf

02/13/25 6:52 PM

#512731 RE: janice shell #512709

White House terminates top federal prosecutors amid DOJ, FBI purge

Numerous U.S. attorneys announced their departures during a period of extreme
upheaval at the Justice Department, an institution long criticized by Trump.

Image - The Department of Justice headquarters in Washington in 2024.
A Justice Department spokesman couldn't immediately say how many U.S.
attorneys the White House order affected.J. David Ake / Getty Images file

Feb. 14, 2025, 4:56 AM GMT+11 / Updated Feb. 14, 2025, 8:12 AM GMT+11

By Ryan J. Reilly

WASHINGTON — The White House terminated multiple U.S. attorneys Wednesday evening amid a period of upheaval at the Justice Department initiated by President Donald Trump, who was himself a criminal defendant in two separate federal cases until they were dropped after his election in November.

The full extent of the terminations was not clear Thursday morning. The White House did not respond to a request for comment, and a Justice Department spokesman could not immediately provide a figure for how many of the country's 93 U.S. attorneys in federal court districts across the country were affected.

The remaining U.S. attorneys who were nominated by former President Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate were expected to leave at some point, but their immediate terminations by the White House were a departure from history. In the past, politically appointed U.S. attorneys had been asked to resign by the Justice Department.

The terminations affected at least two court-appointed U.S. attorneys, one of them a career federal prosecutor who had worked Jan. 6 cases. A spokesperson for that court-appointed U.S. attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of California, Tara McGrath, was “informed of her termination in a communication from the White House, at the direction of the President of the United States," McGrath’s office said in a news release.

The U.S. attorney for the Northern District of California, Ismail Ramsey, also received a termination letter from the White House, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The U.S. attorney for Maryland, Erek L. Barron, and the U.S. attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, Dena J. King, both announced their departures Wednesday but did not provide reasons. McGrath, Ramsey, Barron and King were Biden nominees confirmed by the Senate.

The U.S. attorney for the Western District of Washington, Tessa Gorman, who was a court-appointed top federal prosecutor, “was removed from her post,” a spokesperson said. Gorman took on the role in an acting capacity before former Attorney General Merrick Garland named her to the job. The judges of the Western District of Washington named her to the position in May.

Immigration
Trump's presence looms as Florida GOP passes immigration deal after weeks of infighting
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/immigration/trumps-presence-looms-large-florida-gop-passes-immigration-deal-weeks-rcna192081

Justice Department
Top federal prosecutor in N.Y. resigns after being told to drop Mayor Eric Adams charges
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/top-federal-prosecutor-ny-resigns-told-drop-adams-charges-rcna192030

A source familiar with the matter told NBC News that one of the fired U.S. attorneys received a letter from Trent Morse, the deputy director of the Office of Presidential Personnel, that read: “At the direction of President Donald J. Trump, I am writing to inform you that your position as U.S. Attorney is terminated, effective immediately.”

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., announced Thursday on X that Jonathan Ross, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, had also been fired but that the notice was "sent in error." Cotton said that after he spoke with senior White House officials, Ross was reinstated.

The White House’s direct involvement in the firings is unusual, as such decisions typically come from the Justice Department. During Trump’s first term, Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked U.S. attorneys to resign, and only one was terminated after having refused to resign.

During Biden’s term, Trump-appointed U.S. attorneys were asked to resign and were given three weeks to leave at a set date, while a number of interim U.S. attorneys who were not Senate-confirmed (including those appointed by courts) remained. That action also originated from the Justice Department.

Since Trump took office 24 days ago, the Justice Department has been through a tremendous period of unrest. It started the day he was inaugurated, when he issued a mass pardon for Jan. 6 rioters convicted in the biggest federal investigation in American history and then named an advocate for Capitol rioters as the interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.

Since then, Trump's acting deputy attorney general — who himself worked Jan. 6 cases — fired federal prosecutors who had originally been hired to work Capitol cases and demanded a list of FBI employees who investigated the Capitol siege. The Trump administration also demanded a list of probationary FBI employees, raising fears of mass firings that would affect the bureau for years to come.

Ryan J. Reilly is a justice reporter for NBC News.

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/white-house-terminates-top-federal-prosecutors-doj-fbi-purge-rcna192008

Thanks. 1st term more stuck in to try to change him, likely now more see that to be naive. One positive
note is that despite Trump's influence there are plenty of Americans who hang on to their integrity.