Elon Musk DESTROYS His Own Company As Tesla Sales Crater Worldwide by John Iadarola The Damage Report Feb 11, 2025
Elon Musk hit with the bad news as he tanks his own company in the first weeks of Donald Trump's administration with Tesla sales across the world plummeting and Telsa stock dramatically plunging. John Iadarola and David Shuster break it down on The Damage Report. Leave a comment with your thoughts below!
"Elon Musk’s increasingly prominent role in American politics is dragging down sales of his Tesla automobiles around the globe.
The report from electric vehicle trade publication Inside EVs was highlighted by Jonathan Last at The Bulwark on Monday, who described Tesla’s sales as having “fallen off a cliff” over the past year through this January. Among the statistics from the report noted by Last were multiple regions where Tesla sales dropped even though overall EV sales were rising — illustrating how this wasn’t an industry-wide decline, but rather a phenomenon specific to Musk’s company:
California leads the United States in EV sales. In 2024 EV sales of all non-Tesla brands increased by 1.4 percent in the state while Tesla sales declined by 11.6 percent. That’s a steep drop in America’s most important EV market."
Transcript
Elon Musk may not deserve an ounce of credit for founding Tesla because he didn't. I will never stop reminding people of that. No, neither founded it, nor did any of the engineering of the cars or anything like that. But he should receive, I think, at least close to 100% of the blame for destroying the brand's reputation in near record time. And we've got a variety of different numbers to go over here, demonstrating what the effect of having a front man like Elon Musk can be. And for a long time, they sort of just they rode on oh, he generates headlines. He hypes things up. He lies about timelines and capabilities and the cost of things. But the tech journalists don't care because this gets people to read their magazines, so they never call them on it. And that made the company big. Well, now he's the front man who's doing, you know, Nazi salutes on stage, and that's probably going to hurt you. So let's see, what are Tesla sales actually doing. So in California. So that's the US state that leads in EV sales. Okay. So in 2024 EV sales of all non Tesla brands increased by 1.4%. Meanwhile, Tesla sales declined by 11.6%. That was their number one state for sales in the US. So that's a pretty steep drop. But it's not just the US that we're talking about here. So let's talk about worldwide. In Germany that's Europe's biggest car market. Tesla has been the German EV sales champ for some time. Last month, their sales in Germany dropped by 60% compared to one year ago. So that's comparing January of 2025 to January of 2020 for a 60% drop in France year over year. Tesla sales dropped by 63% in January. In the UK, overall EV sales were up 7%. Tesla sales were down 8% in China. January January Tesla sales were down by 11.5% year over year. And if you have been following this, Elon Musk has for years been trying to break more into the Chinese market. That does not appear to be doing well at this point. And you could sort of see why some of these numbers would go would go down. I don't know why. You know, when you have him coming in to like Germany, for instance, and trying to look as hard as he can for the most neo-Nazi esque politicians to support. A lot of Germans are probably not going to be big fans of that. Seeing him do the Nazi salute probably isn't going to make you popular in some parts of the world. And so you can take a look at how tied to your political ID your view of Tesla has become, bearing in mind that Tesla has always been it's an electric car company. That's libs stuff, right? Well, now Trump supporters are far more likely to have a positive view of it. Only 41% of those who voted for Harris view it favorably. And bear in mind those libs are still far more likely to actually buy an electric car like some of these conservatives might look at it favorably, but they also think the electric cars are stupid and shouldn't exist. So not a great business plan necessarily. And by the way, for those looking to buy an EV in the next year, comparing it to other brands, it's now trailing like Ford and VW. I barely even know which EVs VW makes. But people have a higher view of them, and you can see that Unfavorability at 37% way higher than a lot of these other brands and its overall brand identification. You only have to go back like three years for it to be the top ten most admired brands of all products. And now you look at it over time, it's dropped down significantly. It was in eighth place in 2021. It's now in 63rd. Okay. On attributes like character, trust and ethics. It's in the 70s. It's way beyond or lower now than other car manufacturers. Honda is at seventh. Toyota at 12th. Subaru at 15th. General Motors, which people love to dog on. They're doing way better than Ford right now. Than Tesla right now. Ford is as well. And you can also see we'll close on this. Their stock price going down. It sort of rallied a little bit after Trump won. And now that's going down once again. And certainly, you know negative headlines about Elon Musk don't help. Negative headlines like this that the Tesla Cybertruck is 17 times more likely to lead to fire fatalities than the Ford Pinto was, which late night comics joked about for literally years. All of this is not good for the brand. Which leads me to wonder at what point do they just get rid of him? Like, and then maybe get rid of the Cybertruck. And then you'll probably be doing much better, David. But what do you make of all this? Well, I think he's doing to Tesla what he did to to Twitter. Right. He took Twitter, which was a valuable tool for a lot of people, which had certain basic rules and standards and tried to weed out the hatred and the xenophobia and the racism and try to make sure that people were speaking in facts on Twitter. And he essentially turned that into his own playpen and chased a lot of progressive voices away and brought in a lot of racism and a lot of vile like, the worst in America is now on X. And so, okay, he destroyed the value of Twitter by turning it to X and doing all this nonsense. Now he's almost like he's doing the same thing with Tesla, in part because, you know, one of the other reasons that Tesla is hurting right now is because the Trump administration is stripping out all the funding for electric vehicle charging stations across the United States, so the infrastructure is not there to support electric vehicles, although Tesla is doing worse than other ones. So and again, his own sort of reputation. Elon Musk's polling among Republicans continues to plummet. And I think people are just sort of sick of him. They don't they don't like what he's doing to social media. They don't like what he's doing to governance, and they don't like what he has been doing to Tesla. Yeah, 100%. And and again, none of this is like necessary really. Like again, he didn't found Tesla. He didn't come up with the concepts for most of these cars except for the dumbest one. And so like if they got rid of him, I think they would do much better. There's there's reasons to like Tesla's. I, I find their designs to be a little bit boring and they barely iterate year to year. And there's a lot of issues like that. And Elon Musk, despite everybody saying literally the only thing we want is an affordable EV, he decided to make the Cybertruck instead. So again, bad CEO, they could just get rid of him. But I don't think they're going to do that because their board of directors is now packed with Musk cultists that seem to love him, despite the fact that not only is he out there doing damage to their brand identity, but like, does anyone think that he's doing the job of CEO right now? There and at SpaceX and at Twitter and all that. He's literally he's living in the Department of Education building with a bunch of 17 year old boys. You think he's actually functioning as a CEO? I know I'm not a businessman or whatever, but I don't understand why this is how businesses work. And by the way, tomorrow on the program, we're going to dive in to give you a little bit of a taste there with the fire thing with the Ford Pinto. There was just recently released an evaluation of automobile safety that is scathing towards Tesla. And we're going to dive into all of the numbers on tomorrow's show. So definitely tune in for big news Wednesday.
GOP Show They Are DONE With Democracy, Want A KING by Sarah Longwell and JVL The Bulwark Feb 11, 2025 Bulwark Takes
Sarah Longwell and JVL react to Scott Jennings putting Donald Trump over the rule of law by saying that Trump should defy court orders that are limiting his ability to dismantle the federal government.
Transcript
[Sarah Longwell] Hey guys. I'm Sarah Longwell, publisher of the Bulwark. I'm here with my best friend JVL. What's up man? You look great. I'm glad you wore that hat.
[JVL] Everything's going so good. I just feel like we're finally coming out of this, America! It's gonna to be all right.
[Sarah Longwell] Yeah, yeah, you feel like things are turning around.
[JVL] It's going to be all right.
[Sarah Longwell] You know, it's funny. You are known for your trademark optimism, so great. All right, so listen. Here's why I dragged you on the camera. I got something I want to talk about, okay? So we talked about this already, this past Sunday, after a Court ruled that Trump could not go through with one of his executive orders, our vice president, JD Vance, tweeted that, "If a judge tried to tell a general how to conduct a military operation, that would be illegal. If a judge tried to command the attorney general on how to use her discretion as a prosecutor, that's also illegal. Judges aren't allowed to control the Executive's legitimate power."
Now, people like us said, "Wait a minute. I'm sorry. I actually think Judges are there to maybe draw lines around Executive authority. That is what judges have done in the past. So here's the thing, the reason I want to talk to you is that JD Vance coming out and saying that, and because we all know what they're doing, they are preparing for when the courts tell them they can't do something, to try and ignore the courts, right? And they're in a process -- and this is important, because Republicans do this -- they are in a process of building legitimacy for that totally illegitimate position. And one of the ways they do that is to have their toady surrogates go out and say, "Hey guys, nothing to see here. Of course we can't just have judges telling the president how to do their job.
[JVL] Be cool. Be cool everybody.
[Sarah Longwell] And one of my favorite Trump toadies, last night on CNN, one Scott Jennings, he reacted --
[JVL] I'm so glad CNN brings him onto their airwaves. He really helps their viewers understand the world better.
[Sarah Longwell] He's quite illuminating, that gentleman.
[JVL] Yeah.
[Sarah Longwell] Well he reacted to Vance's tweet. So he was asked if he believed that Trump should defy court orders that are limiting his ability to dismantle the federal government. And he gave exactly the type of answer you would expect from Scott Jennings. And I would like us to watch it.
[Scott Jennings] Now I think we do have a constitutional crisis. And it's being caused by these judges. They're not here to tell us how to spend the money. They're not here to set broad federal policy. That is the president's job as elected by the people. These judges are supposed to be settling discreet specific matters, not policy setting. I think Vance is right. I think Trump has a point. And these judges want nothing more but to continue the lawfare.
[Reporter] Let me just understand where you stand. If a district court judge rules in a way that the president dislikes, should the president listen, or should the president defy?
[Scott Jennings] If a district court judge tries to usurp the authority of the chief executive of this country, he should absolutely defy it. No matter who the president is, the duly elected chief executive of this country, they should not be sharing the broad plenary powers of the presidency with 300 individual district court judges.
[Sarah Longwell] Who cares about what those pesky District judges might say. What is a district judge anyway? Do we care?
[JVL] Is that even a real judge? All they judge is a district.
[Sarah Longwell] Yeah. [Laughs] Did you see Sununu sitting there?
[JVL] Yeah.
[Sarah Longwell] I saw some choice stuff from him too. He's moved up to a CNN pundit now.
[JVL] Yeah. That's great. Good god. [Adopting heavy English accent] At this point, I raise a practical question, Sarah. Who is it who decides whether they're usurping legitimate authority or not? Is it the president himself who decides that? Sorry, this is my Nigel Tufnel from Spinal Tap. This is like, "Will we be playing Stonehenge tonight?" Just say you want a king! Just say it. You know you want to. Just say you want your big daddy to take his belt off. You can do that Scott. You don't need to be afraid of it. Nobody on CNN is going to King Shame you.
[Sarah Longwell] I knew you were the right person to call to do this video, that you were going to keep it light, keep it --
[JVL] Cool.
[Sarah Longwell] Hey, but here's the thing. So just as some background, in the past few weeks, as you know there's been this blitzkrieg trying to dismantle the government --
[JVL] Uh, to pick a word.
[Sarah Longwell] To pick a word. As of yesterday, five different judges across the country, issued temporary blocks on five different executive orders, including Trump's attempt to overturn birthright citizenship, because it's obviously unconstitutional, funding cuts at NIH, the deferred resignation program for federal employees -- since it's not at all clear that that's legal to offer -- the firing --
[JVL] But Sarah, they sent an email! They sent an email! If people replied to that email with the word "resign" in the subject, I believe that's binding law. It's like signing a Blood Oath with the Devil. Like, you know, you sign the contract, you get the golden fiddle, then you have to play better than the devil does, otherwise he gets your soul. No?
[Sarah Longwell] Oh, the plot of one of my favorite songs. So then the firing of a nonpartisan government ethics watchdog, right? And then the federal funding freeze.
So there's been either temporary restraining orders, or they are just putting, you know, temporary blocks on these things. So one of the things Scott said in that clip is that he would have the same position on this matter if a Democrat did it.
[JVL] Oh, sure.
[Sarah Longwell] Now what I want to know from you, because I saw Susan Collins do a thing too when she announced recently that she's gonna confirm Tulsi Gabbard. No, wait. Was it Tulsi Gabbard or RFK? Merkowski said she's gonna do Tulsi Gabbard. Oh, when Susan Collins was asked about this, about what Trump was doing, she said, "Well Joe Biden did it and he set a really terrible precedent. And I'm seeing a lot of people say this, like this idea that if it was a Democrat, you know, they'd say the same thing: Yes, the legitimate executive authority. Okay. Do you think that Scott Jennings would say the same thing if it was a Democrat?
[JVL] You know Sarah, I'd really like to know when we could finally get back to talking about the real issues that Americans care about, like Hunter's laptop.
[Sarah Longwell] [Laughs]
[JVL] No, of course not. And this is what I mean. Look, Scott Jennings is free to do what Scott Jennings does. But I do fault CNN's executives for putting him on air, because it's preposterous to put that guy on air. He's just Bagdad Bob. Like he's absolutely bankrupt, and he will say anything. And there's no actual news value, or analytical value, in listening to him. Unless you agree, right? Unless the view of CNN's executive leadership is that that is the correct interpretation. Otherwise it's nonsense, and frankly kind of traitorous nonsense.
But of course none of this is about Biden. And if it were about Biden, I mean, then we we would have seen it about Biden, right? And Biden adhered to all of the laws. Biden even just sat there on his hands over the DOJ squashing the part two of the report on Trump's confidential documents case.
[Sarah Longwell] Well, here's the thing. I've seen this argument come up a lot, because two things are going on here. And it's not about Scott Jennings per se, it's about normalizing the idea that Trump is within his right to defy a court order, right? Like the minions are out trying to say that this is fine. While simultaneously you're seeing arguments like, "Well, Biden did this. And he set this precedent." And I really want to push back on this idea. Okay, here's what Biden did. I was mad when he did it, too. What Biden did, it was on student loan forgiveness, and he said, "The Supreme Court blocked me, but it didn't stop me." And by the way, you know what Scott Jennings tweeted when Joe Biden did that? He said that --
[JVL] Did he say, "I'm sorry, but President Biden is within his legitimate authority." Is that what he said?
[Sarah Longwell] He said, "Rough day for the 'America is hurtling toward a dictatorship!" crowd."
[JVL] Oh wow! So he thinks that means dictatorship. Yikes!
[Sarah Longwell] So anyway, but the disingenuousness of Scott Jennings, notwithstanding.
Here's the thing about what Biden did. I thought it was crappy when he came out and he was like, "You know, it's not going to stop me." But here's what he didn't do. He didn't just defy the order. He didn't just forgive all the student loans in a direct attack like saying. "I'm not going to listen to what the court said." What he did was he went back to the drawing board, and tried to come up with a different legal theory that the courts might go for. He accepted the ruling, and went back with his lawyers, and was like, "Let's try this again. Let's come at this from a different angle."
That is not what Trump is doing! Everybody listen to me! This is not what Trump is doing. Trump is saying if the courts rule against him -- just a lowly District Court, which by the way, I don't know why, he can appeal it if he doesn't like it, and it will go up to the Supreme Court, eventually. That's what will happen. But if they just decide, "No, we're just going to defy it," that is a constitutional crisis, is it not? Am I getting this wrong?
[JVL] No, you're right of course. And you know, it's actually worse than even you've portrayed it. Because this afternoon, we had report from NBC news ,that what happened with the FEMA funding is a judge issued a temporary restraining order saying, "You cannot freeze disbursements from FEMA; you have to be giving those out." The Trump Administration just defied it. They just kept holding on to the FEMA disbursements. So they went back to court and the judge said, "No, you have to follow my order." This is the, "You can't not follow the order." And then NBC News got a hold of a memo sent out by a senior official in FEMA saying, "No. Hold those. Don't disburse any funds." And so as the people from NBC noted, what you have here is a scenario in which you have a bunch of civil service bureaucrats at FEMA who are being told, "If you don't break the law, we will fire you; but if you do break the law, I guess just hope that Daddy Trump will pardon you? You'll be like Eric Adams. It'll all be cool. Be cool, Daddyo." And this is Gangster government. AND I'M NOT CLEAR AS TO WHY IT WOULDN'T WORK THIS WAY, BECAUSE THE SUPREME COURT FUCKING INVENTED CRIMINAL IMMUNITY FOR THE PRESIDENT! And if you do that, this is what you get. It isn't like, "Oh, this is an unintended consequence. How could we possibly have known?" Like this is literally, you had a guy stand in front of you and say say, "Uh well, I mean, I guess if the president sent Seal Team 6 to assassinate the guy he was running against, it would probably be cool." And then they said, "Yeah, okay, that sounds good. We'll sign off on that. Yeah, what could possibly go wrong?" Sarah, this is where we live now. And it's because all of this that -- I've written a bunch about this -- I'm pretty convinced the Supreme Court will not rule against him, because at this point they understand that if they do it, and he defies them, what are they going to do about it? And that's the real end, right? I mean, that is the point where all the floodgates are opened, and we are in actual dictatorship autocracy, because the Constitution has just been been burned. And I think John Roberts isn't going to want to take that chance. My suspicion is that he will try to find some lawyerly way to let Trump do whatever he wants, while saying that he didn't have to, he didn't have to let Trump do whatever he wants, he chose to, and at some point in the unspecified future he could choose to stop Trump.
[Sarah Longwell] I disagree with you.
[JVL] Okay. That's new.
[Sarah Longwell] I think that Amy Coney Barrett [laughs], I do not think the Supreme Court -- I agree with you that John Roberts will do what he always does, which is try to find some halfstep way, but I do think they will do something to rain Trump in. And they'll probably do some kind of half a loaf thing. But I do think they want to steer us away from a constitutional crisis. And I also don't like the idea of taking the bleakest view on this, in part because I don't like the idea of all of us just saying, "Yeah, country's over. Let's have no expectations for the Supreme Court." Because here's the thing man. I don't know who needs to learn this, Scott Jennings, [holds up chart] this is how government works, okay? The checks and balance of the Judiciary, right? The Executive branch=. And you have Congress. I don't know about you, but I came up in Republican circles where they're always like, "We need to do more civic education. People don't understand the way things work." Here's how it works. This is called checks and balances, right? They're co-equal branches of government .
[JVL] Graphic design is your passion.
[Sarah Longwell] [Laughs] I just did this just now.
[JVL] Are you going to pull out your pocket Constitution next?
[Sarah Longwell] Don't make me. I will pull out the Constitution.
[JVL] Can I break you? Do I have permission to break you on YouTube? Normally we save JVL breaking Sarah for the secret show. Here's why the Supreme Court should NOT stand in the way of presidential authority and executive power. [Adopting heavy British accent] Because the Constitution provides a remedy in case the executive overreaches. The legislative branch can impeach, convict and remove an overzealous chief executive. Mwahahahaha! It's over.
[Sarah Longwell] You didn't break me! Hold on a second.
[JVL] All of the pieces of the Constitution are now dead letters. They are dead letters.
[Sarah Longwell] All I wanted was 15 minutes to make fun of Scott Jennings, draw a poor man's thing about the way the checks and balances work. That's all I wanted to do. The world is still moving. There will be elections in 2026. And before any of you jump in the comments to be like, "Naive Sarah, we're not having elections." Okay guys, well then what are you doing watching a political podcast if it's all ending? Just go fishing or something. Go do something else with your lives. What are we all doing here if we're not trying to stop the march of autocracy on our liberal democracy. We're trying to do that, right? So let's not say it's all over. Let's figure out what we're going to do about it. And (1) is to demand that Congress assert their power, (2) is to make sure Democrats are in charge in 2026 so that they can impeach him, and (3) to demand that the Judiciary do the things that it is supposed to do, which is to uphold its lower courts when the lower courts are correct. Like when they're right. And to say that the judicial branch still matters. It is there to put a check on the Executive branch. It's literally its role.
[JVL] Sarah, do you want to know why I'm here? You know why I'm here doing this instead of out fishing? One reason is so that when you and I are hauled off to the camps, and we're put in side-by-side cells in Guantanamo, I can sit in my cell and I could say, "Told you so; told you so, over and over until you want to murder me for an extra pack of cigarettes --
[Sarah Longwell] We don't have to be in cells for that to happen, okay? We're there.
[JVL] [Laughs]
[Sarah Longwell] All right. Fine! That's all I got, man. That's all I got.
Trump's DOJ To DISMISS Prosecution of NYC Mayor Eric Adams, But NOT For Lack of Evidence??? by Glenn Kirschner Feb 12, 2025 All the "King's" Men: Trump's lackeys and their disservice to America
Donald Trump's Department of Justice seems to be leaving the honest practice of the law behind. DOJ leadership directed federal prosecutors at the Southern District of New York U.S. Attorney's Office to dismiss all criminal charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
In a remarkable admission, a DOJ memo says they are not dismissing the case based on "assessing the strength of the evidence", but due to the "restricted ability (of Adams) to help the Trump administration."
This video discusses the three main takeaways from this searingly unjust development.
Transcript
So friends, Donald Trump's department of justice has signaled that it intends to dismiss, or really more accurately, to withdraw criminal charges against New York city mayor Eric Adams, and it sure looks like they are preparing to hold those charges over the head of Mayor Adams. To what end? You know friends, this is no way to run a Department of Justice. Let's talk about that because Justice matters. [Music]
Hey all. Glenn Kirschner here. So friends, a Federal grand jury handed down a 57-page indictment detailing the allegations against New York city mayor Eric Adams and specifically charging Adams with conspiracy and bribery and wire fraud and other crimes, and even though the evidence in that 57-page indictment looks strong, Donald Trump's Department of Justice is seeking to dismiss the case against him. Let's start with the new reporting. This from CBS News:
"Justice Department tells prosecutors to drop case against New York city mayor Eric Adams."
And that article begins:
The Department of Justice told Federal prosecutors in New York to drop their corruption case against New York mayor Eric Adams citing his restricted ability to help the Trump Administration enforce its immigration policies.
You know friends, this is a special kind of lawlessness, and a really nefarious kind of leverage it appears Trump's DOJ is exerting against Eric Adams. We'll talk more about that leverage in a minute. The article continues:
Acting Deputy attorney general Emil Bove, sent a memo instructing prosecutors in the southern district of New York U.S. attorney's office, to abandon the charges. "You are directed as authorized by the Attorney General, to dismiss the pending charges," Bove wrote in a memo Monday adding that the department reached this conclusion without assessing the strength of the evidence, or the legal theories on which the case is based, and in no way calls into question the integrity and efforts of the prosecutors who brought the case. Instead, Bove wrote that the timing of the charges, and the former US attorney who brought the case, created appearances of impropriety, and that the probe into Adams' office has unduly restricted mayor Adam's ability to devote full attention and resources to the illegal immigration and violent crime that occurred in his city under President Joe Biden. Bove added that the charges against Adams can be reconsidered by the southern district of New York federal prosecutors after the November 2025 New York City mayoral election."
And what that sounds like to me, is Donald Trump's DOJ saying, "So look Adams, we will be holding these charges over your head, so you best do as we say. The article continues:
The stunning decision comes after Department lawyers met with Adams' attorneys and Manhattan Federal prosecutors in late January where senior officials discussed dropping the charges against the embattled mayor. In September Adams was indicted on five counts including bribery, conspiracy, and campaign Finance violations. He pleaded not guilty to all charges. The mayor's trial is scheduled to begin in April. The decision to drop the charges will still need to be formally submitted by prosecutors and approved by the judge overseeing the case.
Friends, I think by any objective assessment of what's going on here, this is a stunning example of governmental misconduct. FBI agents, and undoubtedly lots of other law enforcement agents and agencies, but FBI agents and federal prosecutors, public servants, all undoubtedly worked their tails off investigating these suspected crimes, and presenting what was almost certainly a mountain of evidence to a grand jury and obtained a public corruption indictment detailing the alleged crimes of Eric Adams. And Donald Trump's dirty DOJ just brushes it all aside, You know what an insult to the FBI agents, to the federal prosecutors, to the Grand jurors, and the many others who work to put this important public corruption case together, and what a victimization of the people of New York.
So friends, what are three of the many takeaways from this horrific development, this searing abuse and Injustice. Well, first of all this decision to dismiss these charges, or withdraw them and potentially hold them over Eric Adams head, has nothing to do with the strength of the evidence supporting these criminal charges. How do we know that? Because Donald Trump's DOH told us so. It said that the Department reached this conclusion without assessing the strength of the evidence. Friends, once a case has been indicted, the strength of the evidence is pretty much the only thing that should come into play when prosecutors are considering dismissing an indictment that they worked so hard to obtain, and that a grand jury handed down. No, it should be based only on the strength the quality the quantity of the evidence the ability of the prosecutors to use that evidence to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. But Donald Trump's Department of Justice said it has nothing to do with the strength of the evidence, but it has everything to do with something else. According to Donald Trump's Department of Justice, takeaway number two. it's all about Eric Adams' restricted ability to help the Trump Administration.
Friends, can you imagine, that it has nothing to do with the strength of the evidence; rather, it has everything to do with Eric Adams' ability to help Donald Trump and his administration?
This is the legal upside down. This is not the way the criminal justice system is supposed to work. And that brings us to the third takeaway with these cases being dismissed. They can be re-indicted at the pleasure of the Department of Justice, Donald Trump's Department of Justice. And they are being dismissed, or withdrawn, because they expect Eric Adams to help the Trump Administration. You know, in undefined ways: immigration; fighting violent crime.
Yeah right. Sure. What do you think Eric Adams will do to keep these charges from being dropped on his head anew, as Donald Trump's Department of Justice said they are prepared to do? Talk about leverage. Do we suspect Eric Adams would do damn near anything the Trump Administration wanted him to do to keep from being re-indicted? Friends, this is not the way the Department of Justice is supposed to operate
Because Justice matters. Friends try to hang in there. Please stay safe, please stay tuned and I look forward to talking with you all again tomorrow [Music]
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Justice Department orders charges against NYC Mayor Eric Adams dismissed: The mayor was charged with bribery, fraud and other counts. Legal experts questioned the Trump administration’s justification for the move, and one law enforcement official called the order “transparent corruption.” by Ken Dilanian, Ryan J. Reilly and Tom Winter NBC News Feb. 10, 2025, 5:16 PM MST / Updated Feb. 10, 2025, 7:57 PM MST https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/er ... rcna191600
Acting U.S. Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove has ordered federal prosecutors in New York to drop corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams, a senior Justice Department official said Monday evening.
The order is for all charges against Adams to be dismissed, and the dismissal is without prejudice, the official said, meaning charges could be refiled in the future.
The charges have not yet been dismissed, and federal prosecutors in New York did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday night.
A formal dismissal request would be filed in court by prosecutors overseen by Danielle R. Sassoon, the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, where the charges were brought. A motion to dismiss would also be reviewed by a judge.
Adams’ attorney Alex Spiro called the planned dismissal a victory. “As I said from the outset, the mayor is innocent — and he would prevail. Today he has,” Spiro said in a statement.
In a memo, Bove argued that the indictment of Adams in September came too close to this year's mayoral primary in June and that it limited Adams' ability to aid President Donald Trump's crackdown on immigrants and to fight crime.
Bove said Adams' case would be reviewed by a new Trump-appointed U.S. attorney after the general election for mayor in November.
Bove, without citing specific evidence, also suggested that the charges were politically motivated. “It cannot be ignored that Mayor Adams criticized the prior Administration’s immigration policies before the charges were filed," Bove wrote.
Professor Stephen Gillers, an expert on legal ethics at New York University Law School, rejected Bove’s explanation.
“Although dressed up as a concern for appearances and despite his disclaimer," Gillers said, "Bove’s memo is really a baseless and offensive slur against the former U.S. attorney and the lawyers who worked on the Adams case at the premier federal prosecutorial office in the nation.”
The office also prosecuted Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison last month after he was convicted of bribery, obstruction of justice and other charges.
The indictments of Adams and Menendez, two prominent Democratic elected officials, during the 2024 presidential election cycle were generally seen as political blows to the Democratic Party. And the fact that charges could be filed against Adams again could make him beholden to the Trump administration.
A federal law enforcement official called the order to withdraw the charges “horrific” and “just transparent corruption.”
Adams, a former New York police captain elected mayor in 2021, was charged in an indictment unsealed in September with one count of conspiracy to receive campaign contributions from foreign nationals and commit wire fraud and bribery, two counts of soliciting campaign contributions from foreign nationals and one count of soliciting and accepting a bribe.
The indictment accused him of taking $100,000 worth of free plane tickets and luxury hotel stays from wealthy Turkish nationals and at least one government official in a nearly decadelong corruption scheme.
Adams has pleaded not guilty. He has said that he is innocent, that the charges are politically motivated and that he would fight the charges.
Trump suggested on Dec. 16 that he would consider pardoning Adams, saying that Adams "was treated pretty unfairly” and that he would need to see the case, “because I don’t know the facts.”
Adams met with Trump in Palm Beach, Florida, days before Trump was inaugurated as president. He said they discussed a number of topics but “did not discuss my legal case.” Adams later attended Trump’s inauguration.
An attorney for Adams contacted Justice Department leadership late last month about dropping the criminal case.
Adams was elected Brooklyn Borough president in 2013 before he was elected mayor of New York. Damian Williams, the Biden-appointed U.S. attorney who brought the charges, said Adams was alleged to have been taking bribes and soliciting illegal campaign contributions dating to his time as the borough president.
Adams ran for mayor on a platform of fighting crime, beating Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa, who founded the 1970s-era anti-crime patrol the Guardian Angeles.
Williams announced his resignation in December after Trump won the election.
In announcing criminal charges, Williams had said Adams allowed a Manhattan skyscraper to open without a fire inspection as part of the alleged bribery scheme.
“Adams put the interests of his benefactors, including a foreign official, above those of his constituents,” Williams said at the time.
Spiro, Adams' attorney, said Monday that "the mayor never used his official position for personal benefit. Nor did he have any role in violating campaign finance laws."
Ken Dilanian is the justice and intelligence correspondent for NBC News, based in Washington.
Ryan J. Reilly is a justice reporter for NBC News.
Tom Winter is a New York-based correspondent covering crime, courts, terrorism and financial fraud on the East Coast for the NBC News Investigative Unit.
Phil Helsel, Adam Reiss and David Rohde contributed.
Feb. 12: Eight inspectors general—or federal agency watchdogs—who were fired by Trump filed a lawsuit, arguing their termination violated federal rules that require the executive branch to give Congress 30 days notice before any inspectors general are fired and give concrete reasoning to justify that decision.
Feb. 11: A court order halting the Trump administration’s directive to freeze most federal spending will remain in place after the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals declined to lift it, the latest twist in a court battle over the funding pause, after multiple judges previously blocked it—and Judge John McConnell Jr. then separately had to order the Trump administration to “immediately restore frozen funding,” after a group of states that sued Trump alleged they “continue to be denied access to federal funds.”
Feb. 11: District Judge John D. Bates ordered Health and Human Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration to restore their websites and datasets to what they were on Jan. 30—prior to data being removed—before the end of the day in response to a lawsuit from Doctors for America that alleged the Trump administration removed “a broad range of health-related data.”
Feb. 11: A lawsuit was filed by a group of nongovernmental organizations and small businesses that receive American foreign aid against the Trump administration for its efforts to phase out the U.S. Agency for International Development, and it alleges Trump’s administration “violated the separation of powers” and, in doing so, put their aid work and employees’ livelihoods at risk.
Feb. 10: Trump’s deadline for over 2 million federal employees to accept buyout offers was once again extended by Boston-based Judge George O’Toole, as he weighs whether to halt the buyouts long-term, as requested by federal workers’ unions that sued over the plan (the buyout deadline was initially set for Feb. 6, but O’Toole has now delayed it twice).
Feb. 10: After 22 states sued the National Institutes of Health over its decision to place a 15% cap on indirect funding for research projects—calling the rate change “arbitrary and capricious”—District Judge Mary Page Kelley halted the cap while the litigation moves forward.
Feb. 10: District Judge Joseph LaPlante halted Trump’s order that only allows the children of U.S. citizens and permanent residents to become citizens at birth, in response to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union—marking the third time a federal judge has blocked Trump’s attempt to end birthright citizenship since it was issued Jan. 20.
Feb. 9: The Treasury Department asked District Judge Paul Engelmayer to “immediately” dissolve his order barring political appointees from accessing the Treasury Department’s system, after Trump, Musk and their allies blasted the judge’s ruling and claimed it shouldn’t be possible for the judge to restrict DOGE’s access.
Engelmayer ruled political appointees and “special government employees”—like members of Musk’s team—must be cut off from access from the Treasury’s systems while the litigation is pending, after 19 Democratic state attorneys general sued Trump over DOGE’s Treasury access.
Feb. 7: Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, blocked a plan to put 2,200 USAID staff on paid leave, part of Trump’s gambit to wind down the foreign aid agency—a temporary reprieve following a lawsuit by a federal employees’ union calling Trump’s efforts to dismantle USAID without Congress’ permission “unconstitutional and illegal.”
Feb. 7: The University of California Student Association sued the Department of Education, accusing Musk’s DOGE of illegally accessing “sensitive personal and financial information” of about 42 million federal student loan borrowers.
Feb. 7: The Justice Department agreed to not name the FBI agents involved in the Jan. 6 investigation before a judge rules on two lawsuits from FBI agents that argued the dissemination of the agents’ names could threaten their employment, reputation and wellbeing.
Feb. 6: Judge John Coughenour in Seattle extended a pause on Trump’s day-one executive order rescinding birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented or temporary immigrants, in response to a lawsuit brought by Democratic-led states, writing, “The president cannot change, limit, or qualify this Constitutional right via an executive order.”
Feb. 5: A second judge —Deborah L. Boardman of Maryland—blocked Trump’s policy rescinding birthright citizenship, in response to a lawsuit brought by nonprofits representing undocumented pregnant women.
Jan. 23: Coughenour paused Trump’s order rescinding birthright citizenship, the first major ruling against the second Trump administration.
Jan. 20: The first lawsuit against Trump’s administration was filed minutes after he was sworn into office, as public interest law group National Security Counselors argued DOGE should be classified as a federal advisory board that has “fairly balanced” membership and follows public transparency rules.
Multiple ICE impersonation arrests made during nationwide immigration crackdown by Artemis Moshtaghian, Gloria Pazmino and Nick Valencia CNN Updated 1:35 PM EST, Wed February 5, 2025 https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/04/us/ice-i ... index.html
From left: Sean-Michael Johnson, Aidan Steigelmann and Carl Thomas Bennett. Al Cannon Detention Center/Philadelphia Police Department/Wake County Government/Courtesy WRAL CNN
Editor’s note: This story contains profane and hateful language.
Authorities in at least three states have arrested individuals allegedly impersonating Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers at a time when real ICE agents have ramped up immigration enforcement efforts under the Trump administration, adding to existing fears of law enforcement among migrant communities.
In South Carolina, Sean-Michael Johnson, 33, was charged with kidnapping and impersonating a police officer after allegedly detaining a group of Latino men along a Charleston County road. Johnson is accused of “willfully and unlawfully presenting himself as an ICE Agent and detaining a vehicle of individuals from moving,” according to court records.
The incident, which was recorded by one of the victims, took place on Sullivan’s Island near Charleston on January 29.
“You all got caught!” Johnson is heard saying on the video. “Where are you from, Mexico? You from Mexico? You’re going back to Mexico!”
In the video, Johnson is seen taking the driver’s keys, mocking the driver’s accent, while jiggling the car keys in his face. At one point he is seen trying to take the driver’s phone.
The driver calls a friend and, speaking Spanish, says, “I don’t know man, he’s saying immigration.”
“Now don’t be speaking that pig-Latin in my f**king country!” Johnson says, knocking the phone out of his hand.
“He’s crazy. He’s a racist, man,” one of the passengers in the vehicle, another victim, can be heard saying in Spanish.
Johnson was charged with three counts of kidnapping and one count each of impersonating a law enforcement officer, petty larceny, assault and battery, according to jail records.
CNN has been unable to locate an attorney for Johnson. In court Saturday, the public defender said Johnson was extremely sorry for his actions.
Johnson bonded out of jail over the weekend, and in a court appearance Saturday his family pleaded with the judge, saying their son has mental health issues and “has tried to get help” in the past, “but he needs to continue with that therapy,” according to CNN affiliate WCIV.
An ICE spokesperson in a statement Wednesday noted “imposters” who commit such “dangerous” actions can face criminal charges at the federal, state and local levels.
“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and agents are highly trained and dedicated professionals who are sworn to uphold the law, protect the American people and support U.S. national security interests,” the statement said. “ICE strongly condemns the impersonation of its officers or agents.”
‘Vulnerable in this moment’
The founder and president of the Charleston Hispanic Association told CNN that harassment of his constituents based on their ethnicity is commonplace.
“We hear of Hispanics being targeted quite a bit. It’s an everyday thing,” Enrique Grace told CNN. “I don’t think this is an isolated case, it was just caught on video. It’s pretty sad to see that.”
The ICE impersonation cases come as President Donald Trump has quickly mobilized wide swaths of the federal government to arrest and detain undocumented immigrants in the United States, part of a broader strategy to amass a large enforcement machine.
The administration has sent troops to the US-Mexico border, utilized military aircraft to repatriate recent border crossers, and deployed people from multiple federal agencies, including those under the Justice Department, to augment immigration enforcement operations.
“Immigrants are a target for scams anyway, and I think that this just kind of amplifies this, this situation where people who are particularly vulnerable are in this moment where they are kind of looking for ICE agents everywhere,” Siembra NC co-director Nikki Marin Baena told CNN.
The grassroots organization based out of North Carolina focuses on supporting Latino communities through civic engagement and social justice.
Siembra NC is actively combating ICE impersonation and reducing community fear by creating and distributing multimedia educational resources, including graphics and videos, and hosting statewide “know your rights” presentations that teach Latino residents how to distinguish between legitimate federal law enforcement officers and potential impersonators.
College student accused of impersonation
In another impersonation case, in Philadelphia, police charged a Temple University student in connection with the alleged impersonation of ICE officers on campus. The incident, which occurred Saturday night, involved three individuals, two wearing shirts with “Police” and “ICE” in white lettering, attempting to enter a residence hall on campus, Temple University said in a statement.
After being denied entrance to the residence hall, they were later found disrupting a local business, the university said.
Philadelphia police arrested 22-year-old Aidan Steigelmann, charging him with impersonating a public servant, with the university saying that he’s been placed on “interim suspension.” Two other suspects involved in the incident fled the scene in a light-colored SUV, according to the Philadelphia Police Department.
CNN has reached out to Steigelmann’s attorney for comment.
Temple’s statement followed an announcement earlier in the week reacting to Trump’s executive orders, including the plans for mass deportations of undocumented immigrants.
“The uncertainty of the present moment has also led to an increase in rumors, which can quickly be amplified through social media,” Temple University President John Fry said in a Wednesday statement. “Please know that neither Temple’s Department of Public Safety nor the Philadelphia Police Department have any reports of federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents being on campus.”
Meanwhile, in Raleigh, North Carolina, Carl Thomas Bennett was arrested for allegedly impersonating an ICE officer and sexual assaulting a woman at a Motel 6 threatening to deport her if she didn’t comply, according to CNN affiliate WRAL.
Police reports indicated that Bennett, 37, “threatened to deport the victim if she did not have sex with him,” and “displayed a business card with a badge on it,” according to WRAL.
Bennett was denied bond and appointed a public defender, court records show, CNN affiliate WBTV reported.
CNN has reached out to Raleigh Police Department for comment.
The incidents show the importance of “safe space” policies, according to Maribel Hernández Rivera, director of policy and government affairs, border and immigration at the American Civil Liberties Union.
“It’s important for immigrant communities to feel safe, to be able to approach law enforcement and report anything that’s happening and when people do not feel safe, not only does it make people who are immigrants less safe, but it makes all of us less safe,” Hernández Rivera said.
In her view, Trump administration immigration policies are designed to instill fear, which she says endangers public safety for entire communities.
“The point of their policies is to create fear, to create panic, to create chaos. That’s the point,” Hernández Rivera told CNN. “The point is a cruelty and that is what’s being exploited here.”
Under the Trump administration, federal immigration authorities are now permitted to arrest people and carry out enforcement actions in and near places such as churches and schools, marking a departure from long-standing policy to avoid so-called sensitive areas. Hernandez said the shift in policy not only threatens public safety but discourages people who need help from law enforcement or health care providers to seek it out.
After watching the video Hernández Rivera said it also showed the effect that White House policies are having across the country – not just for migrant communities but also everyone else.
“What we’re seeing here is we have leadership at the top that dehumanizes people who are immigrants and now this is the outcome of that dehumanizing,” Hernández Rivera said. “You end up having a violation of people’s rights, people see and hear this and they feel emboldened to go against immigrants.”
CNN’s Devon Sayers, Shawn Nottingham, Nayeli Jaramillo-Plata, and Lex Harvey contributed to this report.
Crockett Slams MAGA Republicans for Relinquishing Constitutional Duties to Elon Musk DOGE Hearing Rep. Jasmine Crockett Feb 12, 2025
In the first DOGE Subcommittee Hearing of the 119th Congress, Rep. Crockett delivers powerful remarks, criticizing MAGA Republicans for allegedly surrendering their constitutional responsibilities to Elon Musk. Watch as Crockett exposes the troubling influence of tech moguls on political decision-making and the future of democracy.
Transcript
Thank you madam chair um and Mr talve. I'm just going to go ahead and pick up where you left off really quickly um just to be clear the upgrades that you're talking about as it relates to our data processes these aren't things that would be free are they they would cost some kind of money not looking for a number but they will cost correct some are free and some would cost money okay all right so I just want to leave it there because um we've had a number of these hearings so I do want to be clear before the Trump Administration came in um this committee did exist in the form of the oversight committee and our task is to root out waste Fraud and Abuse in that vein we had a number of hearings at least last term I can't speak for any other term as I'm only in my sophomore term and we dealt with improper payments And interestingly enough, our chairwoman who is so passionate about this today, she missed every single one of those improper payment hearings. But just to be clear, I was there, so I don't want anyone to believe that Democrats just come to work and don't plan to do work. In fact, I'm trying to figure out exactly what it is that the Republicans believe our job is. Because right now, they have relinquished their constitutional duties over to an unelected bureaucrat, someone who no one went out to vote for, and absolutely he is occupying the Oval Office as we saw yesterday. And that is a first for me to see someone occupying the Oval Office who's never actually been elected to the Oval Office, and actually answering more questions than the person that allegedly got elected. But for whatever reason, this is the first time we're having a DOGE subcommittee hearing, and that guy is not here. Instead, we have y'all. So I do want to thank you for coming. But I will say this it's also interesting to me, that in the first few days of Doge existing, we know that they are trying to get rid of the Department of Education, USAid, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, they're laying off FAA workers, they are going after the FDA, the CDC, the HHS, the FBI agents, and they're talking about getting rid of FEMA. And they brought y'all in, and I am going to say that I actually was shocked that there was only one person that seemed like he was an overt Trumper, as you laid out your opening remarks, because I anticipated that at least one of y'all would say yes, what Elon is doing is exactly what we would prescribe. But instead, I will applaud you, because you actually were focused. You talked about what the American people are looking for us to do. We've actually consistently, on this side of the aisle, promoted this idea of making investments into technology so that we can do things such as say look at the Department of Defense, the Department of Defense that takes up approximately 50% of our discretionary income, or our discretionary spending. Approximately 50% goes to Department of Defense Department of Defense, who has not been able to pass an audit in the last six audits. And we're not talking about pennies.
I understand that we want everything to be perfect and if we could get all ways of Fraud and Abuse out, that would be fantastic. But let me talk about the big numbers.
The big numbers are on that side when we look at say our entire work Force, our federal Workforce, as we're trying to somehow fire all of them, they don't even make up a total of 5%. It's even less than that when we look at our budget. But let's talk about defense. That just happens to be the same side of the Ledger that Mr musk gets the vast majority of his money from. In fact, at the same time that they were unlawfully, and we will stay in court, because on this side we believe in Law and Order, I mean a number of us are actually lawyers. But nevertheless, we understand the Constitution. We believe in that as well. And so there's things such as you know, impoundment, right? Because as Mr witson said, he said we need to return the power of the purse to Congress. It never left! According to the Constitution, that's where it's at now.
I know that people are confused right now, because for whatever reason, we had a guy that went in, and you talk about people invading our data. Listen, people said that they were upset about Tik Tok. But I'm upset about the guy that run Twitter, who for sure is doing nefarious things. Because I don't understand if you are trying to conduct Audits, and figure out where the waste, Fraud, and Abuse is, I don't know why you would go to some tech guy. In fact, it was only techies that were sitting there at the inauguration. We didn't have Auditors. I would welcome Auditors to come in and do forensic audits. In fact, he sat there in the Oval Office yesterday, and he admitted that he was lying and he was using his propaganda machine to do it when he said that we sent millions of dollars to Gaza for Condoms. That was a lie. So let me tell you something ...
[Marjorie Taylor Greene] Time expired. Time expired.
Trump Admin Admits It Made Significant Errors in Dismantling USAID by Martha McHardy is a U.S. News reporter. Newsweek Published Feb 11, 2025 at 10:16 AM EST Updated Feb 11, 2025 at 7:18 PM EST https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-u ... rs-2029312
The Trump administration has admitted it made two significant errors in its attempt to dismantle U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), according to new legal filings.
The Context
The Trump administration is attempting to put more than 2,000 USAID workers on paid leave and recall nearly all of those posted abroad. Under the plan, most USAID programs worldwide would also be suspended following a funding freeze initiated by the White House.
On Friday, a federal judge blocked the attempt to put 2,700 USAID workers on paid leave.
It comes amid the Trump administration's drive to drastically reduce the size of the federal government and cut what it claims is wasteful public spending. Leading this effort is the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), headed by Elon Musk. Republicans have cited USAID's spending on global diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives as an example of wasteful public spending. On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order to dismantle federal diversity and inclusion programs.
What To Know
The Department of Justice has acknowledged making two errors in an initial court hearing for the lawsuit, according to new legal filings from February 10.
According to the filings, in a hearing on February 7—which was held 3 hours after the initial temporary restraining order (TRO) motion was filed—the department said that only 500 USAID employees had been placed on leave, when the number was in fact 2,140.
The DoJ has now corrected the error in subsequent legal filings.
Meanwhile, in the initial court hearing, the DoJ also initially said that future contracts with USAID would be frozen, per a directive by Secretary of State Marco Rubio. However, subsequent filings revealed existing contracts were also paused.
The errors were set out in a notice of correction attached to the legal filing from February 10. The filing said the errors were made "in good faith" on the basis of information provided to the DoJ immediately prior to the hearing.
The American Foreign Service Association had asked the court to declare unlawful what they called "a series of unconstitutional and illegal actions taken by President Donald Trump and his administration that have systematically dismantled" USAID without authorization from Congress.
"Pursuant to federal statute, Congress is the only entity that may lawfully dismantle the agency," the lawsuit said.
The plaintiffs in the case also said that the moves by Trump and Musk had "generated a global humanitarian crisis by abruptly halting the crucial work of USAID employees, grantees, and contractors."
"They have cost thousands of American jobs. And they have imperiled U.S. national security interests," they wrote.
U.S. District Judge Carl J. Nichols—who was nominated by Trump during his first term—has now entered a temporary restraining order in the case, putting the Trump administration's plans on hold. Nichols wrote that the firing of USAID employees would result in "physical harm."
"No future lawsuit could undo the physical harm that might result if USAID employees are not informed of imminent security threats occurring in the countries to which they have relocated in the course of their service to the United States."
"Administrative leave in Syria is not the same as administrative leave in Bethesda: simply being paid cannot change that fact," he wrote.
All 2,140 employees have now been taken off of paid leave. However, some USAID workers were reportedly turned away from their offices even after the TRO was issued.
Nichols said he would not impose a pause on the funding freeze, putting many USAID programs at risk.
Only a small portion of USAID funding goes towards DEI initiatives. Much of USAID funding goes toward agencies like the World Food Program, UNICEF and nongovernmental agencies like Save the Children. USAID is the world's biggest aid donor.
What People Are Saying
AFSA President Tom Yazdgerdi said in a press release: "This reckless decision has thrown USAID's Foreign Service professionals—and their families—into chaos. These non-partisan men and women have dedicated their careers to advancing America's interests abroad, only to have their futures suddenly placed in jeopardy."
He added: "USAID Foreign Service officers are non-partisan patriots who serve under every president, regardless of party, to implement U.S. foreign policy and advance national security. AFSA is committed to using every tool at our disposal to protect these professionals, safeguard their careers, and ensure that USAID retains the expertise necessary to fulfill its mission."
Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social: "USAID IS DRIVING THE RADICAL LEFT CRAZY, AND THERE IS NOTHING THEY CAN DO ABOUT IT BECAUSE THE WAY IN WHICH THE MONEY HAS BEEN SPENT, SO MUCH OF IT FRAUDULENTLY, IS TOTALLY UNEXPLAINABLE. THE CORRUPTION IS AT LEVELS RARELY SEEN BEFORE. CLOSE IT DOWN!"
What Happens Next
For now, the plan to fire over 2,000 USAID employees is on hold until February 14 at 11:59 p.m. It remains unclear whether Trump has the authority to dismantle USAID. Democrats say such a move would be illegal.
Elon Musk said during an X Spaces stream last Monday that Trump "agreed" with him that the agency should be shut down.
"I actually checked with him a few times. Said 'Are you sure?' Yes, so we're shutting it down," Musk said.
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OMG! Trump DOJ Makes SHOCK ADMISSION in Filings by Ben Meiselas and Harry Litman MeidasTouch Feb 12, 2025
MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas and Talking Feds host Harry Litman report on Donald Trump’s DOJ lawyers being forced to admit they lied to federal judges in prior proceedings.
Transcript
[Ben Meiselas] the Department of Justice lawyers in the Trump Administration have had to make some very embarrassing filings that would be putting it lightly and there could be major repercussions as to factual misrepresentations AKA lies that they made to federal judges we've been covering here Harry Litman and us here at the Meidastouch Network Harry Litman on the talking feds podcast the tsunami of cases that have been filed against the Trump Administration for all of these patently egregiously unlawful executive orders that Donald Trump has been signing shutting down agencies cutting off funding where Congress has clearly appropriated the funds gutting staff firing people without uh appropriate diligence and without appropriate cause I mean there's been a lot of horrific actions but some powerful lawsuits some orders by judges and when these filings happen just to situate everybody there are often emergency hearings that are held and these hearings take place in court or via conference call depending on the hearing but often in a courtroom and the judge whether they're Democratic appointed Republican appointed Trump appointed judges they ask the lawyers questions now Harry Litman worked in the Department of Justice he was a top leader at the doj Harry Litman was also a top federal prosecutor the top federal prosecutor in the Western District of Pennsylvania so it's not uncommon, though, that at the DOJ, you would get called in for emergency hearings. And you've got to know the facts. So you go to the source of the facts, the agency heads, certain people, and you got to damn well make sure that when you're making representations to judges, as the lawyer you have your facts straight, because every time you step into the court, whether you're a private lawyer or a government lawyer, you have something called a bar license ,and you have to be candid, you have a duty of candor, duties of diligence with the court. Yes I know that Donald Trump is a felon. Yes I know that Elon Musk is an online agitator, and engages in horrific conduct. Lawyers have licenses. And I want to talk about these Notices of Corrections that we're seeing filed now where these lawyers have admitted that they are lying.
So you have a Notice of Correction filed in the case involving SAID on the critical issue where the DOJ had acknowledged that it made two significant errors during the court hearing last week on efforts to dismantle USAid. One, it said only 500 employees had been placed on leave when the actual number was 2,140. It's a significant difference right there. And here was the key issue, is that judge Carl Nichols, by the way a Trump appointed judge, was drilling into because the DOJ said only future contracts were stopped. Existing contracts though were also stopped. Why? That's the key issue is because I guess technically, the administration can say, "Hey, the new administration's changing protocols going forward." They have no right to stop past programs where appropriations were already made. That was the key issue. The plaintiff's lawyers representing the US employees said that's not true, they're cancelling the old stuff. The Trump lawyers said, "No no no, it's just the future stuff." Were being told that was a lie. Fortunately the federal Judge Carl Nichols saw through that lie. But that was a material misrepresentation.
Then there was the other notice of correction that they filed on another key issue in another case about the access that one of these Elon Musk 22year-old guys -- I think this one was calling himself Big Balls -- that that they were basically saying that he didn't have certain levels of access when it turns out he had levels of access.
Let me just read it to you at the hearing on February 5th 2025, held the same day as plaintiff's motion for temporary restraining order that was filed in the above caption case Council for defendants made a factual representation in good faith based on the information provided by defendants that requires correction with the benefit of more time time to investigate the facts over the weekend defendants came to understand that Marco alz who at the time of the hearing was employed by the Department of Treasury had not in fact been designated by the treasury Department as a special government employee SJ sge as Council stated at the February 5 hearing Mr LZ was however a treasury Department employee that has significant impacts because then LZ is subject to certain ethics requirements that were at the heart of it so Harry these are not notices of arada right you and I know notices of Arata you get the date wrong occasionally maybe there's a typo this these material misstatements Harry you led the do you led you were a leader there what do you make of all of this man oh man so Ben you're right I did have these higher level positions but the real uh analogous experience is the guy on the ground who has to go into court and man you got to pity those figures now I'm not sure that they're huge misstatements that go to the heart of the case but it it may be that the poor putts who was kicked in the rear and said go in there and defend uh didn't know one way or another they obviously should have been much much more careful but it's also it's so discordant in a couple ways with what's really going on first on the facts the guy doesn't even know the person who does what is supposed to be the heart and soul meat and potatoes the work of the Department of Justice representing to the court and to the public what's going on and then second there's only one thing you can do when you're in that very unenviable position that is fall on your sword and fall on it hard and that's what these uh lawyers are doing but it's completely opposite from what the Trump guys are doing because they are arrogant as can be about it and Asser their Authority and indifference to the legal violations that the people when they go to court in front of the judges have to fess up to so it it it is a general problem now in the Department of Justice where the you know as I've said before The Barbarians aren't just at the gates they are ransacking the actual Palace and you they you have to send in the lawyers to say crap but they don't even know what it is they're supposed to say they don't know what the policies are because nobody consults them nobody cares about what the Department of Justice has to say to courts of all things rather it's just the policies coming on from on high from Trump and then his acting uh Deputy attorney general Emil Bo so it is just um what what's happening now in the department B is just an utter divorce from the lifeblood of what prosecutors do which is base decisions on facts and law it's something other than that they were candid in saying it for example and dropping the charges although we'll see what whether the um the career person now acting us attorney in New York goes along but it's just a really complete reversal of what they're supposed to be doing it's both heartbreaking and infuriating and and totally terrifying for the people who are still there who don't know what to do the these are the few lucky ones who are being kicked into court and say you know try to defend this say some crap and then then you find out of course two days later what you told them was exactly uh wrong so you know in general it the this is part and parcel of a broader effort by the the new Trump Invaders not not simply to enact all these um really unlawful Provisions but also prevent all the kinds of guard rails and oversight and accountability and just the to care about what ought to be the DNA of the department going in explaining to the judges making arguments under the law that's an afterthought at best we can only hope it stays that way for for these new uh Invaders in the in the department this is Far and Away Far and Away the worst um juncture and um period for the doj and its history know we talk about the executive branch and the take care Clause take care that the laws be Faithfully executed that's the opposite of what they're doing the Trump White House halted all enforcement of the law the Foreign Corrupt Practices at which is to stop foreign bribery from embedding itself in American Business the law to be Faithfully executed requires that the Foreign Corrupt Practices a law be enforced and Trump's literally saying don't enforce it when the law is trying to be enforced against someone like mayor Adams in a bribery related case without even doing legal analysis as you mentioned Trump's doj prepar a memo to the United States Attorney or acting United States Attorney in uh the southern district of New York or in New York basically saying hey do not Faithfully follow the law and we're not even going to give you a reason we're not giving you a memo that says main Justice reviewed this case and it turns out that it's a bad case because here are the reasons or there's bad law or something no it's just we want want you to dismiss it even if crimes were obviously committed so now it puts that United States Attorney acting us attorney but that whole you know New York prosecut the whole the whole all those prosecutors they're being told you know there's crimes but you got to look away from the crimes and that's what those lawyers as we started this segment the lawyers who are issuing notices of Correction you have lawyers who went to ostensibly good law schools or law schools throughout the country who took their own Oaths who have obligations under their legal standards and they're being asked now lawyers violate the law there are lawyers who are going to do it there are lawyers who are not going to do it I think unfortunately the ones who are attracted to Trump don't give a crap about that but you're putting a lot of career people also at risk Harry last word yeah look like the good teacher you are Ben you make it all sound basic and Elementary but you know why it is basic and Elementary Congress passes the laws saying if you want to remove them you need four cause saying Foreign Corrupt Practices Act we know that you can try to cheat like other folks do but that's not what we want American companies to do and the like and Trump asserts again and again some uh ability or power out of no where because he won the election to just ignore it remember the Republicans control everything here if they really wanted to repal the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act if they really wanted to shut down usaid they could do it but what's happening is they' ma they're making a real deal with the devil where the republicans in Congress don't have to take the immediate heat for doing something that is outrageous and bad for the country and makes victims here of the honest companies and just goes against who we are as a people and Trump uh takes on that for them and they in return Stay cow and quiet and do nothing so we've talked before in a different uh YouTube about the court stepping up thank God they are and you have to pray that it continue because the other people the people who are really again and again their Ox is being gored Congress which has said do this do that and don't do this Trump is just saying giving them the middle finger and they're saying thank you sir may I have another it is fraking crazy there you have it everybody you know where I get my legal news from it's from Harry Litman the talking feds YouTube channel the talking feds substack and the talking feds podcast it'll probably take you all of 30 seconds to subscribe to all three and it will inform you the way it informs me at these pivotal moments talking feds YouTube talking feds substack talking feds podcast Harry Litman as always thank you thank you Ben Can't Get Enough Midas check out the midus Plus substack for adree articles reports podcasts daily Recaps from Ron filipowski and more sign up for free now at Midas plus.com [Music]
Inspectors General SUE Trump Administration Over Unlawful Firings! by Glenn Kirschner Feb 12, 2025
Inspectors general are the peoples' watchdogs inside government, guarding against fraud, waste, abuse, and corruption by administration employees and officials. In a very real sense, IGs are our cops on the inside.
Just days after being sworn in, Donald Trump fired a whole slew of IGs in violation of federal law, as discussed below.
Now, some of the wrongfully terminated IGs are fighting back. As The Hill just reported, "Eight Fired Government Watchdogs Sue Trump Administration."
The federal law require a president to give Congress 30 days advance notice before firing an inspector general. Trump gave Congress NO NOTICE, violating federal law.
The federal law also requires a president to provide "substantive rationale, including detailed and case-specific reasons" for the termination. Trump failed to do so, in violation of federal law.
Transcript
[Glenn Kirschner, Justice Matters] Well friends, another day, another lawsuit filed against the Trump Administration. According to the reporting, this makes about 50 legal challenges brought against Trump and Company. This lawsuit was filed by eight inspectors General that Donald Trump unlawfully fired. Let's talk about that because Justice matters [Music]
Hey all, Glenn Kirschner here. So friends, inspector's General IGS are the People's watchdogs inside government making sure that Administration officials do not engage in fraud, waste, abuse, & corruption. IGS are like our cops on the inside. So of course, within days of being sworn in, Donald Trump fired a whole slew of inspectors General, and now eight of those IGS have brought suit for firings that are plainly and obviously in violation of federal law.
Let's start with the new reporting. This from the Hill headline: Eight fired government Watchdogs Sue Trump Administration. And that article begins: Eight Federal Watchdogs ousted by President Trump last month are suing to get their jobs back on the basis that their dismissals were unlawful the lawsuit filed Wednesday asserts Congress was not given proper notice of the removals nor were adequate explanations for the firings given quote president Trump's attempt to eliminate a crucial and longstanding source of impartial nonpartisan oversight of his administration is contrary to the rule of law wrote Seth Waxman a Clinton error solicitor general representing the inspectors General the lawsuit was filed by eight of the 17 fired inspectors General who monitored various agencies in the federal government a 2022 Federal Law requires presidents to notify Congress at least 30 days in advance of firing An Inspector General in addition to providing substantive case specific rationale the inspectors General who sued were removed from the Departments of Defense State labor education agriculture Veterans Affairs and health and human Human Services in addition to the small business administration alt together they oversaw more than 5 trillion of appropriated funds each year and more than 3.5 million federal employees the lawsuit says inspectors General are responsible for providing an independent check on agencies and an Avenue for whistleblowers to report wrongdoing but you know what friends we don't just have to take somebody else's word when they tell us that these firings of these inspectors General were illegal violated federal law let's go to the federal law itself again for anybody scoring at home it is five United States code section 403b and it reads removal or transfer An Inspector General may be removed from office by the president if An Inspector General is removed from office or is transferred to another position or location within an establishment the president shall communicate in writing the reasons for any such removal or transfer to both houses of Congress not later than 30 days before the removal or transfer now friends admittedly I may not be great with numbers but Donald Trump fired these inspectors General about 3 weeks ago as we sit here today so the 30day period required by federal law 30 days of advanced notice to both houses of Congress and reasons for the firings fact-based case based reasons for the firings none of that has been done so the federal law has been violated and in fact one of the fired IGS told Donald Trump and His White House councel exactly that this letter is from Hannibal Mike wear and he is the chairperson of the Council of the inspectors General on integrity and efficiency and he writes to the director of presidential Personnel at the White House Mr Gore the following Dear Mr Gore I am writing in response to your email sent to me and other inspectors General earlier this evening now mind you friends this letter was written on January 24th 2025 the day Donald Trump unlawfully fired the IGS I'm writing in response to your email sent to me and other inspectors General earlier this evening wherein you informed each of us that quote due to changing priori ities your position as Inspector General is terminated effective immediately as chairperson of the Council of the inspectors General on integrity and efficiency I recommend that you reach out to White House Council to discuss your intended course of action at this point we do not believe the actions taken are legally sufficient to dismiss presidentially appointed Senate confirmed in inspector's General specifically based upon the 2022 amendments to the Inspector General Act of 1978 the president must notify Congress 30 days prior to removal of an IG and provide substantive rational including detailed and case specific reasons for such removal should you have any questions please feel free to reach out to me signed Hannibal Mike wear CI chairperson so friends you really don't need to be a lawyer to conclude that Donald Trump violated federal law the law requires 30 days of advanced notice to both houses of Congress and these firings occurred three weeks ago and Trump has given no notice to either house of Congress that would be the first violation of federal law and I think it's also reason reasonable to conclude that when the Federal Law requires the president while he's giving that 30 days advanced notice to Congress to provide substantive rationale including detailed and case specific reasons for such removal well when Donald Trump writes these inspector's General that he is firing on January 24th the following um due to changing priorities your position as Inspector General is terminated effective immediately well due to changing priorities doesn't exactly constitute specific rationale you know case based rationale deficiencies for these firings that would be violation of federal law number two so of course these inspect ctor General brought suit it sure looks like a lay down winner of a lawsuit because Trump and his administration inarguably violated the federal law a couple of times over so like the plaintiffs in the other 49 or so legal challenges lawsuits that have been filed against Trump and Company these inspectors General our cops on the inside the people's Watchdogs guarding against fraud waste abuse and Corruption by the Trump Administration they're not laying down they're not going quietly they're not obeying in advance they're standing up for their rights and they're going to ask federal courts to hold Trump and Company accountable for these wrongful terminations these unlawful firings because to the these inspector's General and all of the others who brought suits against Donald Trump trying to beat back the tide of Lawless conduct Justice matters friends as always please stay safe please stay tuned and I look forward to talking with you all again tomorrow [Music]
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8 fired government watchdogs sue Trump administration by Ella Lee The Hill Wed, February 12, 2025 at 8:58 AM MST2 min read
Eight federal watchdogs ousted by President Trump last month are suing to get their jobs back on the basis that their dismissals were unlawful.
The lawsuit, filed Wednesday, asserts Congress was not given proper notice of the removals, nor were adequate explanations for the firings given.
“President Trump’s attempt to eliminate a crucial and longstanding source of impartial, non-partisan oversight of his administration is contrary to the rule of law,” wrote Seth Waxman, a Clinton-era solicitor general representing the inspectors general.
The lawsuit was filed by eight of the 17 fired inspectors general, who monitored various agencies in the federal government.
A 2022 federal law requires presidents to notify Congress at least 30 days in advance of firing an inspector general, in addition to providing “substantiative, case-specific rationale.”
The inspectors general who sued were removed from the departments of Defense, State, Labor, Education, Agriculture, Veterans Affairs, and Health and Human Services, in addition to the Small Business Administration. Altogether, they oversaw more than $5 trillion of appropriated funds each year and more than 3.5 million federal employees, the lawsuit says.
The ousters were executed last month through brief emails from the Office of Presidential Personnel. Soon after, the watchdogs lost access to government emails and computers, and were physically barred from entering their government offices.
Despite the “obvious illegality” of the firings, the heads of each agency “effectuated and continue to effectuate” the watchdogs’ removals, Waxman said.
Inspectors general are responsible for providing an independent check on agencies and an avenue for whistleblowers to report wrongdoing.
During his first term in office, Trump fired several inspectors general, which spurred an update to the Inspector General Act to require the 30 days’ notice and rationale.
Trump defended the firings last month as a “very common thing to do.”
“Some people thought that some were unfair, some were not doing their job,” the president told reporters aboard Air Force One.
The lawsuit follows more than 50 legal challenges to sweeping Trump administration actions meant to reshape the federal government.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
NY US Attorney Stands Up to Trump's DOJ, Resigns Rather Than Dismissing Case for Political Reasons by Glenn Kirschner Feb 13, 2025
The resistance and opposition from within Donald Trump's Department of Justice is building. Rather than comply with an unethical directive from DOJ leadership, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Danielle Sassoon, resigned.
Days ago, Emil Bove, a member of Trump's team at DOJ, directed the acting US Attorney in Manhattan, Danielle Sassoon, to dismiss the case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, not based on the evidence but because they wanted Adams to help the Trump administration with some of it's goals and priorities.
Rather than agree to dismiss the case for political reasons, US Attorney Sassoon resigned.
Trump's DOJ Officials then tried to move supervision of the Adams case down to Washington, and the two top supervisors in the DOJ's Public Integrity Section resigned as well.
In a staggering display of retaliation, Bove, one of Trump's former criminal defense attorneys now a top DOJ official, told Ms. Sassoon that both she and the prosecutors who worked on the Adams case would be investigated by the DOJ.
Just days earlier, when he was first directing Sassoon to dismiss the case, "Mr. Bove in his order to drop the case said that the directive 'in no way calls into question the integrity and efforts' of the prosecutors working on the case, nor Ms. Sassoon’s efforts in leading them."
Transcript
So friends it really does feel like Donald Trump's Department of Justice is trying to purge all of the Integrity from DOJ's public Integrity section let's talk about that because Justice matters [Music] hey all Glenn Kirschner here so friends the latest display of unethical retaliation against career Federal prosecutors argues in favor of you just renaming the Department of Justice because the justice is Vanishing it's being replaced by lawlessness retaliation and revenge here's some brand new reporting about an egregious display of Injustice and retaliation against career prosecutors this from The New York Times headline order to drop New York city mayor Eric Adams case prompts resignations in New York and Washington the intram US attorney for the southern district of New York and two officials with the federal public Integrity unit all quit after the justice department ordered the charges against mayor Eric Adams to be dropped and that article begins Manhattan's us attorney on Thursday resigned just days after she was ordered to drop the corruption case against New York City's mayor then when Justice Department officials sought to transfer the case to the public Integrity section in Washington which oversees corruption cases the two men who led that unit also resigned according to five people with knowledge of the matter the resignations represent the most high-profile public resistance so far to president Trump's tightening control over the justice department the departures of the us. attorney Danielle Sassoon and the officials Who oversee the Justice Department's public Integrity section Kevin Driscoll and John Keller came in Rapid succession on Thursday days earlier the acting number two official at the justice department had ordered Manhattan prosecutors to drop the corruption case against mayor Eric Adams the agency's justification for dropping the case was explicitly political the number two official Amil B argued that the investigation would prevent Mr Adams from fully cooperating with Mr Trump's immigration Crackdown Mr Bo made a point of saying that Washington officials had not evaluated the strength of the evidence or the legal theory behind the case now friends let's tee up and bring into full Focus the evidence of Revenge and retaliation against career Federal prosecutors Mr in his order to drop the case this was a couple of days ago said that the directive quote in no way calls into question the integrity and efforts of the prosecutors working on the case nor Miss sassoon's efforts in leading them and friends just a day or two later when us attorney Sasson resigned rather than following Emil Bo's unethical command to dismiss a case not based on the evidence but based on politics she resigned rather than doing Donald Trump's dirty political deal what did Bo say then Mr Bo in accepting Miss sassoon's resignation informed her that the prosecutors who worked on the case were being placed on administrative leave and would be investigated by the attorney general and the Justice departments in internal investigative arm he told Miss Sassoon both bodies would also evaluate her conduct and friends there it is in the harsh light of day retaliation retribution Revenge because just a couple of days ago Bo in his order to drop the case said that the directive in no way calls into question the integrity and efforts of the prosecutors working on the case nor Miss sassoon's efforts in leading them but when she resigned instead of you know doing this dirty political deal now you and the prosecutors who worked on the case will be investigated this is no way to run a Department of Justice this is purging the Integrity from the public Integrity section and who is former US attorney Sassoon Miss Sassoon 38 joined the southern district of New York us attorney's office in 2016 a graduate of Harvard College and Yale law school she clerked for justice anonin Scalia about as conservative as a Supreme Court Justice gets she clerked for justice Scalia on the Supreme Court and is a member of the Federalist Society the conservative Legal Group so friends former US attorney Sassoon clearly has some conservative credentials clerking for justice Scalia being a member of the Federalist Society now I am not suggesting that Miss Sassoon brings whatever ideological beliefs or political leanings she may have into her work I am not suggesting that indeed I have great admiration for her for taking this principled stand but I do wonder what the Federalist Society for example might make of this blatant and transparent retaliation against miss suon one of its members you know the Federalist Society is a conservative organization but this kind of unethical Behavior dismissing somebody because they take their oath of office seriously they take their responsibility to prosecute without fear or favor seriously retaliating against them for that and saying now we're going to investigate you and your whole team of prosecutors who were involved in the mayor Adams case that's not conservative that's not liberal you know if it's anything it's just plain old corruption even if it is corruption masquerading as conservatism it's just plain old corruption but friends if there's any good news emanating from this latest debasement of the Department of Justice it's this we've discovered three new Points of Light amidst the Trump induced Darkness those three points of light are Danielle casson Kevin dris and John Keller all of whom stood up to Trump's corruption because to them Justice matters friends as always please stay safe please stay tuned and I look forward to talking with you all again tomorrow [Music]
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U.S. Department of Justice United States Attorney Southern District of New York The Jacob K. Javits Federal Building 26 Federal Plaza, 37thFloor New York, New York 10278
February 12, 2025
BY EMAIL The Honorable Pamela Jo Bondi Attorney General of the United States U.S. Department of Justice 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C. 20530
Re: United States v. Eric Adams, 24 Cr. 556 (DEH)
Dear Attorney General Bondi:
On February 10, 2025, I received a memorandum from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, directing me to dismiss the indictment against Mayor Eric Adams without prejudice, subject to certain conditions, which would require leave of court. I do not repeat here the evidence against Adams that proves beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed federal crimes; Mr. Bove rightly has never called into question that the case team conducted this investigation with integrity and that the charges against Adams are serious and supported by fact and law. Mr. Bove's memo, however, which directs me to dismiss an indictment returned by a duly constituted grand jury for reasons having nothing to do with the strength of the case, raises serious concerns that render the contemplated dismissal inconsistent with my ability and duty to prosecute federal crimes without fear or favor and to advance good-faith arguments before the courts.
When I took my oath of office three weeks ago, I vowed to well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I was about to enter. In carrying out that responsibility, I am guided by, among other things, the Principles of Federal Prosecution set forth in the Justice Manual and your recent memoranda instructing attorneys for the Department of Justice to make only good faith arguments and not to use the criminal enforcement authority of the United States to achieve political objectives or other improper aims. I am also guided by the values that have defined my over ten years of public service. You and I have yet to meet, let alone discuss this case. But as you may know, I clerked for the Honorable J. Harvie Wilkinson III on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and for Justice Antonin Scalia on the U.S. Supreme Court. Both men instilled in me a sense of duty to contribute to the public good and uphold the rule of law, and a commitment to reasoned and thorough analysis. I have always considered it my obligation to pursue justice impartially, without favor to the wealthy or those who occupy important public office, or harsher treatment for the less powerful.
I therefore deem it necessary to the faithful discharge of my duties to raise the concerns expressed in this letter with you and to request an opportunity to meet to discuss them further. I cannot fulfill my obligations, effectively lead my office in carrying out the Department's priorities, or credibly represent the Government before the courts, if I seek to dismiss the Adams case on this record.
A. The Government Does Not Have a Valid Basis To Seek Dismissal
Mr. Bove's memorandum identifies two grounds for the contemplated dismissal. I cannot advance either argument in good faith. As you know, the Government “may, with leave of court, dismiss an indictment” under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 48(a). “The principal object of the 'leave of court' requirement is apparently to protect a defendant against prosecutorial harassment, e.g. , charging, dismissing, and recharging, when the Government moves to dismiss an indictment over the defendant's objection.” Rinaldi v. United States, 434 U.S. 22, 30 n.15 ( 1977). “But the Rule has also been held to permit the court to deny a Government dismissal motion to which the defendant has consented if the motion is prompted by considerations clearly contrary to the public interest.” Id.; see also JM § 9-2.050 (reflecting Department's position that a "court may decline leave to dismiss if the manifest public interest requires it”). The reasons advanced by Mr. Bove for dismissing the indictment are not ones I can in good faith defend as in the public interest and as consistent with the principles of impartiality and fairness that guide my decision-making.
First, Mr. Bove proposes dismissing the charges against Adams in return for his assistance in enforcing the federal immigration laws, analogizing to the prisoner exchange in which the United States freed notorious Russian arms dealer Victor Bout in return for an American prisoner in Russia. Such an exchange with Adams violates commonsense beliefs in the equal administration of justice, the Justice Manual, and the Rules of Professional Conduct. The "commitment to the rule of law is nowhere more profoundly manifest” than in criminal justice. Cheney v. United States Dist. Ct., 542 U.S. 367, 384 (2004) (alterations and citation omitted). Impartial enforcement of the law is the bedrock of federal prosecutions. See Robert H. Jackson, The Federal Prosecutor, 24 J. Am. Jud. Soc'y 18 (1940). As the Justice Manual has long recognized, “the rule of law depends upon the evenhanded administration of justice. The legal judgments of the Department of Justice must be impartial and insulated from political influence.” JM § 1-8.100. But Adams has argued in substance -- and Mr. Bove appears prepared to concede -- that Adams should receive leniency for federal crimes solely because he occupies an important public position and can use that position to assist in the Administration's policy priorities.
Federal prosecutors may not consider a potential defendant's “political associations, activities, or beliefs.” Id. § 9-27.260 ; see also Wayte v. United States, 470 U.S. 598, 608 (1985) (politically motivated prosecutions violate the Constitution). If a criminal prosecution cannot be used to punish political activity, it likewise cannot be used to induce or coerce such activity. Threatening criminal prosecution even to gain an advantage in civil litigation is considered misconduct for an attorney. See, e.g., D.C. Bar Ethics Opinion 339; ABA Criminal Justice Standard 3-1.6 (“A prosecutor should not use other improper considerations, such as partisan or political or personal considerations, in exercising prosecutorial discretion."). In your words, "the Department of Justice will not tolerate abuses of the criminal justice process, coercive behavior, or other forms of misconduct." Dismissal of the indictment for no other reason than to influence Adams's mayoral decision-making would be all three.
The memo suggests that the issue is merely removing an obstacle to Adams's ability to assist with federal immigration enforcement, but that does not bear scrutiny. It does not grapple with the differential treatment Adams would receive compared to other elected officials, much less other criminal defendants. And it is unclear why Adams would be better able to aid in immigration enforcement when the threat of future conviction is due to the possibility of reinstatement of the indictment followed by conviction at trial, rather than merely the possibility of conviction at trial. On this point, the possibility of trial before or after the election cannot be relevant, because Adams has selected the timing of his trial.
Rather than be rewarded, Adams's advocacy should be called out for what it is: an improper offer of immigration enforcement assistance in exchange for a dismissal of his case. Although Mr. Bove disclaimed any intention to exchange leniency in this case for Adams's assistance in enforcing federal law, that is the nature of the bargain laid bare in Mr. Bove's memo. That is especially so given Mr. Bove's comparison to the Bout prisoner exchange, which was quite expressly a quid pro quo, but one carried out by the White House, and not the prosecutors in charge of Bout's case.
The comparison to the Bout exchange is particularly alarming. That prisoner swap was an exchange of official acts between separate sovereigns (the United States and Russia), neither of which had any claim that the other should obey its laws. By contrast, Adams is an American citizen, and a local elected official, who is seeking a personal benefit—immunity from federal laws to which he is undoubtedly subject—in exchange for an act -- enforcement of federal law -- he has no right to refuse. Moreover, the Bout exchange was a widely criticized sacrifice of a valid American interest (the punishment of an infamous arms dealer) which Russia was able to extract only through a patently selective prosecution of a famous American athlete.² It is difficult to imagine that the Department wishes to emulate that episode by granting Adams leverage over it akin to Russia's influence in international affairs. It is a breathtaking and dangerous precedent to reward Adams's opportunistic and shifting commitments on immigration and other policy matters with dismissal of a criminal indictment. Nor will a court likely find that such an improper exchange is consistent with the public interest. See United States v. N.V. Nederlandsche Combinatie Voor Chemische Industrie ("Nederlandsche Combinatie "), 428 F. Supp. 114 , 116-17 (S.D.N.Y. 1977) (denying Government's motion to dismiss where Government had agreed to dismiss charges against certain defendants in exchange for guilty pleas by others); cf. In re United States, 345 F.3d 450, 453 (7th Cir. 2003) (describing a prosecutor's acceptance of a bribe as a clear example of a dismissal that should not be granted as contrary to the public interest).
Second, Mr. Bove states that dismissal is warranted because of the conduct of this office's former U.S. Attorney, Damian Williams, which, according to Mr. Bove's memo, constituted weaponization of government as defined by the relevant orders of the President and the Department. The generalized concerns expressed by Mr. Bove are not a basis to dismiss an indictment returned by a duly constituted grand jury, at least where, as here, the Government has no doubt in its evidence or the integrity of its investigation.
As Mr. Bove's memo acknowledges, and as he stated in our meeting of January 31, 2025, the Department has no concerns about the conduct or integrity of the line prosecutors who investigated and charged this case, and it does not question the merits of the case itself. Still, it bears emphasis that I have only known the line prosecutors on this case to act with integrity and in the pursuit of justice, and nothing I have learned since becoming U.S. Attorney has demonstrated otherwise. If anything, I have learned that Mr. Williams's role in the investigation and oversight of this case was even more minimal than I had assumed. The investigation began before Mr. Williams took office, he did not manage the day-to-day investigation, and the charges in this case were recommended or approved by four experienced career prosecutors, the Chiefs of the SDNY Public Corruption Unit, and career prosecutors at the Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department. Mr. Williams's decision to ratify their recommendations does not taint the charging decision. And notably, Adams has not brought a vindictive or selective prosecution motion, nor would one be successful. See United States v. Stewart, 590 F.3d 93, 121-23 (2d Cir. 2009); cf. United States v. Biden, 728 F. Supp. 3d 1054, 1092 (C.D. Cal. 2024) (rejecting argument that political public statements disturb the “presumption of regularity" that attaches to prosecutorial decisions").
Regarding the timing of the indictment, the decision to charge in September 2024—nine months before the June 2025 Democratic Mayoral Primary and more than a year before the November 2025 Mayoral Election -- complied in every respect with longstanding Department policy regarding election year sensitivities and the applicable Justice Manual provisions. The Justice Manual requires that when investigative steps and charges involving a public official could be seen as affecting an election the prosecuting office must consult with the Public Integrity Section, and, if directed to do so, the Office of the Deputy Attorney General or Attorney General. See JM §§ 9-85.210, 9-85.500. As you are aware, this office followed this requirement. Further, the Justice Department's concurrence was unquestionably consistent with the established policies of the Public Integrity Section. See, e.g., Public Integrity Section, Federal Prosecution of Election Offenses 85 (2017) (pre-election action may be appropriate where “it is possible to both complete an investigation and file criminal charges against an offender prior to the period immediately before an election"). The Department of Justice correctly concluded that bringing charges nine months before a primary election was entirely appropriate.
The timing of the charges in this case is also consistent with charging timelines of other cases involving elected officials, both in this District and elsewhere. See, e.g., United States v. Robert Menendez, 23 Cr. 490 (SHS) ( S.D.N.Y.) (indictment in September 2023); United States v. Duncan Hunter, 18 Cr. 3677 (S.D. Cal.) (indictment in August 2018). I am not aware of any instance in which the Department has concluded that an indictment brought this far in advance of an election is improper because it may be pending during an electoral cycle, let alone that a validly returned and factually supported indictment should be dismissed on this basis.
When first setting the trial date, the District Court and the parties agreed on the importance of completing the trial before the upcoming mayoral election—including before the Democratic primary in which Adams is a candidate -- so that the voters would know how the case resolved before casting their votes. (See Dkt. 31 at 38-44). Adams has decided that he would prefer the trial to take place before rather than after the June 2025 primary, notwithstanding the burden trial preparation would place on his ability to govern the City or campaign for re-election. But that is his choice, and the District Court has made clear that Adams is free to seek a continuance. (See Dkt. 113 at 18 n.6). The parties therefore cannot argue with candor that dismissing serious charges before an election, but holding open the possibility that those charges could be reinstated if Adams were re-elected, would now be other than “clearly contrary to the manifest public interest." United States v. Blaszczak, 56 F.4th 230, 238-39 (2d Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Mr. Bove's memo also refers to recent public actions by Mr. Williams. It is not my role to defend Mr. Williams's motives or conduct. Given the appropriate chronology of this investigation and the strength of the case, Mr. Williams's conduct since leaving government service cannot justify dismissal here. With respect to pretrial publicity, the District Court has already determined that Mr. Williams's statements have not prejudiced the jury pool. The District Court has also repeatedly explained that there is no evidence that any leaks to the media came from the prosecution team—although there is evidence media leaks came from the defense team—and no basis for any relief. (See Dkt. 103 at 3-6; Dkt. 49 at 4-21). Mr. Williams's recent op-ed, the Court concluded, generally talks about bribery in New York State, and so is not a comment on the case. (Dkt. 103 at 6 n.5). Mr. Williams's website does not even reference Adams except in the news articles linked there. (See Dkt. 99 at 3). And it is well settled that the U.S. Attorneys in this and other districts regularly conduct post-arrest press conferences. See United States v. Avenatti, 433 F. Supp. 3d 552, 567-69 (S.D.N.Y. 2020) (describing the practice); see also, e.g. , "New Jersey U.S. Attorney's Office press conference on violent crime," YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAEDHQCE91A (announcing criminal charges against 42 defendants). In short, because there is in fact nothing about this prosecution that meaningfully differs from other cases that generate substantial pretrial publicity, a court is likely to view the weaponization rationale as pretextual.
Moreover, dismissing the case will amplify, rather than abate, concerns about weaponization of the Department. Despite Mr. Bove's observation that the directive to dismiss the case has been reached without assessing the strength of the evidence against Adams, Adams has already seized on the memo to publicly assert that he is innocent and that the accusations against him were unsupported by the evidence and based only on “fanfare and sensational claims.” Confidence in the Department would best be restored by means well short of a dismissal. As you know, our office is prepared to seek a superseding indictment from a new grand jury under my leadership. We have proposed a superseding indictment that would add an obstruction conspiracy count based on evidence that Adams destroyed and instructed others to destroy evidence and provide false information to the FBI, and that would add further factual allegations regarding his participation in a fraudulent straw donor scheme.
That is more than enough to address any perception of impropriety created by Mr. Williams's personal conduct. The Bove memo acknowledges as much, leaving open the possibility of refiling charges after the November 2025 New York City Mayoral Election. Nor is conditioning the dismissal on the incoming U.S. Attorney's ability to re-assess the charges consistent with either the weaponization rationale or the law concerning motions under Rule 48(a). To the contrary, keeping Adams under the threat of prosecution while the Government determines its next steps is a recognized reason for the denial of a Rule 48(a) motion. See United States v. Poindexter, 719 F. Supp . 6, 11-12 (D.D.C. 1989) (allowing Government to “to keep open the option of trying [certain] counts" would effectively keep the defendant “under public obloquy for an indefinite period of time until the government decided that, somehow, for some reason, the time had become more propitious for proceeding with a trial”).
B. Adams's Consent Will Not Aid the Department's Arguments
Mr. Bove specifies that Adams must consent in writing to dismissal without prejudice. To be sure, in the typical case, the defendant's consent makes it significantly more likely for courts to grant motions to dismiss under Rule 48(a). See United States v. Welborn, 849 F.2d980, 983 (5th Cir. 1988) ("If the motion is uncontested, the court should ordinarily presume that the prosecutor is acting in good faith and dismiss the indictment without prejudice."). But Adams's consent -- which was negotiated without my office's awareness or participation— would not guarantee a successful motion, given the basic flaws in the stated rationales for dismissal. See Nederlandsche Combinatie, 428 F. Supp. at 116-17 (declining to “rubber stamp" dismissal because although defendant did not appear to object, “the court is vested with the responsibility of protecting the interests of the public on whose behalf the criminal action is brought”). Seeking leave of court to dismiss a properly returned indictment based on Mr. Bove's stated rationales is also likely to backfire by inviting skepticism and scrutiny from the court that will ultimately hinder the Department of Justice's interests. In particular, the court is unlikely to acquiesce in using the criminal process to control the behavior of a political figure.
A brief review of the relevant law demonstrates this point. Although the judiciary "[r]arely will . . . overrule the Executive Branch's exercise of these prosecutorial decisions,” Blaszczak, 56 F.4that 238, courts, including the Second Circuit, will nonetheless inquire as to whether dismissal would be clearly contrary to the public interest. See, e.g. , id. at 238-42 (extended discussion of contrary to public interest standard and cases applying it); see also JM § 9-2.050 (requiring "a written motion for leave to dismiss . . . explaining fully the reason for the request" to dismiss for cases of public interest as well as for cases involving bribery). At least one court in our district has rejected a dismissal under Rule 48(a) as contrary to the public interest, regardless of the defendant's consent. See Nederlandsche Combinatie, 428 F. Supp. at 116-17 ("After reviewing the entire record, the court has determined that a dismissal of the indictment against Mr. Massaut is not in the public interest. Therefore, the government's motion to dismiss as to Mr. Massaut must be and is denied."). The assigned District Judge, the Honorable Dale E. Ho, appears likely to conduct a searching inquiry in this case. Notably, Judge Ho stressed transparency during this case, specifically explaining his strict requirements for non-public filings at the initial conference. (See Dkt. 31 at 48-49). And a rigorous inquiry here would be consistent with precedent and practice in this and other districts.
Nor is there any realistic possibility that Adams's consent will prevent a lengthy judicial inquiry that is detrimental to the Department's reputation, regardless of outcome. In that regard, although the Flynn case may come to mind as a comparator, it is distinct in one important way. In that case, the Government moved to dismiss an indictment with the defendant's consent and faced resistance from a skeptical district judge. But in Flynn, the Government sought dismissal with prejudice because it had become convinced that there was insufficient evidence that General Flynn had committed any crime. That ultimately made the Government's rationale defensible, because “[i]nsufficient evidence is a quintessential justification for dismissing charges." In re Flynn, 961 F.3d 1215, 1221 (D.C. Cir.), reh'g en banc granted, order vacated, No. 20-5143, 2020 WL 4355389 (D.C. Cir. July 30, 2020), and on reh'g en banc, 973 F.3d 74 (D.C. Cir. 2020). Here no one in the Department has expressed any doubts as to Adams's guilt, and even in Flynn, the President ultimately chose to cut off the extended and embarrassing litigation over dismissal by granting a pardon.
C. I Cannot in Good Faith Request the Contemplated Dismissal
Because the law does not support a dismissal, and because I am confident that Adams has committed the crimes with which he is charged, I cannot agree to seek a dismissal driven by improper considerations. As Justice Robert Jackson explained, “the prosecutor at his best is one of the most beneficent forces in our society, when he acts from malice or other base motives, he is one of the worst." The Federal Prosecutor, 24 J. Am. Jud. Soc'y 18 ("This authority has been granted by people who really wanted the right thing done -- wanted crime eliminated—but also wanted the best in our American traditions preserved."). I understand my duty as a prosecutor to mean enforcing the law impartially, and that includes prosecuting a validly returned indictment regardless whether its dismissal would be politically advantageous, to the defendant or to those who appointed me. A federal prosecutor “is the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all." Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935).
For the reasons explained above, I do not believe there are reasonable arguments in support of a Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss a case that is well supported by the evidence and the law. I understand that Mr. Bove disagrees, and I am mindful of your recent order reiterating prosecutors' duty to make good-faith arguments in support of the Executive Branch's positions. See Feb. 5, 2025 Mem. “General Policy Regarding Zealous Advocacy on Behalf of the United States." But because I do not see any good-faith basis for the proposed position, I cannot make such arguments consistent with my duty of candor. N.Y.R.P.C.3.3; id. cmt. 2 ("A lawyer acting as an advocate in an adjudicative proceeding has an obligation to present the client's case with persuasive force. Performance of that duty while maintaining confidences of the client, however, is qualified by the advocate's duty of candor to the tribunal.” ).
In particular, the rationale given by Mr. Bove—an exchange between a criminal defendant and the Department of Justice akin to the Bout exchange with Russia— is, as explained above, a bargain that a prosecutor should not make.Moreover, dismissing without prejudice and with the express option of again indicting Adams in the future creates obvious ethical problems, by implicitly threatening future prosecution if Adams's cooperation with enforcing the immigration laws proves unsatisfactory to the Department. See In re Christoff, 690 N.E.2d 1135 (Ind. 1997) (disciplining prosecutor for threatening to renew a dormant criminal investigation against a potential candidate for public office in order to dissuade the candidate from running); Bruce A. Green & Rebecca Roiphe, Who Should Police Politicization of the DOJ?, 35 Notre Dame J.L. Ethics & Pub. Pol'y 671, 681 (2021) (noting that the Arizona Supreme Court disbarred the elected chief prosecutor of Maricopa County, Arizona, and his deputy, in part, for misusing their power to advance the chief prosecutor's partisan political interests). Finally, given the highly generalized accusations of weaponization, weighed against the strength of the evidence against Adams, a court will likely question whether that basis is pretextual. See, e.g., United States v. Greater Blouse, Skirt & Neckwear Contractors, 228 F. Supp. 483, 487 (S.D.N.Y. 1964) (courts “should be satisfied that the reasons advanced for the proposed dismissal are substantial and the real grounds upon which the application is based").
I remain baffled by the rushed and superficial process by which this decision was reached, in seeming collaboration with Adams's counsel and without my direct input on the ultimate stated rationales for dismissal. Mr. Bove admonished me to be mindful of my obligation to zealously defend the interests of the United States and to advance good-faith arguments on behalf of the Administration. I hope you share my view that soliciting and considering the concerns of the U.S. Attorney overseeing the case serves rather than hinders that goal, and that we can find time to meet.
In the event you are unwilling to meet or to reconsider the directive in light of he problems raised by Mr. Bove's memo, I am prepared to offer my resignation. It has been, and continues to be, my honor to serve as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York.
Very truly yours,
DANIELLE R. SASSOON United States Attorney Southern District of New York
_______________
Notes:
1 I attended a meeting on January 31, 2025, with Mr. Bove, Adams's counsel, and members of my office. Adams's attorneys repeatedly urged what amounted to a quid pro quo, indicating that Adams would be in a position to assist with the Department's enforcement priorities only if the indictment were dismissed. Mr. Bove admonished a member of my team who took notes during that meeting and directed the collection of those notes at the meeting's conclusion.
Trump AG Announces FAKE CHARGES Against Trump Opponents?! by Court Authorities Feb 13, 2025
AG Pam Bondi announces charges against New York officials—but is it all just political theater? Attorney Rich Schoenstein breaks down the reality behind the DOJ’s complaint against Governor Kathy Hochul, Attorney General Letitia James, and others over New York’s Green Light Law. Is this a serious legal battle or just grandstanding?
Transcript
[Pam Bondi] I was in The West Wing swearing in Tulsi gabard and so I just came straight back here so thanks for um being patient with us with the delay um we're here today because we have filed charges against the state of New York we have filed charges against Cathy hokel we have filed charges against Leticia James and Mark Schroeder who is with DMV um this is a new doj and we are taking steps to protect Americans American citizens and Angel moms like the mom standing right behind me who you're going to hear from in a moment/
[Rich Schoenstein] That's newly appointed United States Attorney General Pam Bondi saying that she's bringing charges against Governor Kathy Hochul and Letitia James and the State of New York and others. Is she really bringing charges against them? Not quite. Let's break it all down.
May it please the viewers, I'm Rich Schoenstein. Welcome back to court authorities, good to be back. I've been in an arbitration all week, but I'm catching up with some legal developments, and this one and I'm getting a hold of what my role is here on this Venture um as a civil litigator I like to dive into these cases and see what they're really about and then I can share with you what the actual case is about because I feel sometimes the news coverage doesn't do justice so to speak to what's actually happening and this is a case like that I saw a bunch of headlines about Governor hokel being brought up on charges I saw people posting stuff you know an image of her in an orange jumpsuit that's not at all what's happening it's not the way Pam bondy described it it's not the way it's been reported there is a new civil lawsuit that has been reportedly filed I'll get to that in a minute uh I have the complaint here it's caption for the United States District Court Northern District of New York that's up in Albany it's entitled United States of America the state of New York Kathleen hokel Leticia James and Mark JF Schroeder he's the commissioner of the New York Department of Motor Vehicles so I couldn't find this on the court website yet so I'm not sure it's actually been electronically filed and commenced but we did get a copy of it on the internet and we know what the claims are these are civil claims against the state of New York and those individuals I just mentioned acting in their official capacity so they're only in this lawsuit by name only for the purpose of the claims being brought and essentially the claim is that New York has a law called the green light law that was enacted in 2019 and the claim is that that law the way it's being implemented in New York is violating the federal government rights to control its immigration laws and I go right to the introduction which says um the United States is currently facing a crisis of illegal immigration and the federal government is set to put a stop to it while states are welcome Partners in that effort it is their prerogative as separate sovereigns to refrain but a state's freedom to stand aside is not a freedom to stand in the way and where inaction crosses into obstruction a state breaks the law the state of New York is doing just that it must be stopped so this complaint alleges that the green light law requires New York's DMV commissioner to tip off illegal aliens if a federal immigration agency requests information and that the uh state law is playing out to obstruct giving information on immigrants to Federal authorities including ice um it says Federal immigration law express preempts state and local laws that restrict sharing information with the federal government regarding immigration status it says that under conflict presumption principles the state cannot fashion an obstacle to accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of the federal immigration law so that's sort of the complaint in a nutshell again it's filed in federal court in the uh Northern District of New York that's a little bit of form shopping on the part of the federal government the Northern District of New York is going to be much friendlier to the administration than for example the southern district of New York where I sit or the eastern district of New York presumably it could have been brought in any of those districts but the United States is going to go to the most favorable jurisdiction possible uh it's a short complaint you know the complaint is only 16 pages long it gives an allegations about what the green law is it says the green light law prohibits the commissioner of New York DMV as well as his agents and employees for sharing DMV records or information with any agency that primarily enforces immigration law uh it says it includes a tip off provision it says it imposes strict limitations on those who have access or receive records from New York so that's what it says the green light law does it brings three claims for Relief and all of them are constitutional law arguments that the green light law violates the supremacy clause of the US Constitution uh the supremacy clause is article 6 Clause 2 if you like looking up that kind of thing there's lots of case law and I'm not an expert on this area of constitutional law there's lots of case law about what states can do as uh sovereigns and what they can't do in light of federal government statutes I'm not going to get into all of that but there are three claims the first one is preemption the United States alleges that the green light law is preempted by federal laws requirement that states not prohibit in any way or in any way restrict any government entity or official from sending to or receiving from federal immigration officials information regarding citizenship or immigration status the second claim is that it constitutes unlawful regulation of the federal government the third claim is that it discriminates against the federal government by targeting federal government enforcement specifically in the way it holds out the law and by the way the complaint says that it you know that it's unsafe that it threatens the safety of federal immigration officials that it impedes the federal government's ability to arrest and remove illegal aliens thereby threatening the safety of Americans that allegation assumes of course that immigrants are particularly dangerous that notion has been disproved ad nauseum that's not consistent with the statistics it's no more dangerous than anybody else who's in the US but so be it the relief sought uh is a judgment that the Greenlight law violates the supremacy law a declaration an injunction B Bing enforcement of the green light law and fees and costs that's it they want a declaration that it's unconstitutional they want an injunction against it now this is a civil lawsuit the clip we played of Pam Bondi is her staying up bragging that they've filed charges we've filed charges against Governor Kathy hok we've filed charges against Leticia James no she didn't there's no charges charges are criminal actions a civil lawsuit is just a claim for Relief frankly there's no point in having Kathy hokel or Leticia James or Mark Schroeder named in this complaint you could have made the complaint without them that is just a cheap political stunt and it's not charges and I think Pam Bondi is very intelligent so she's not making a mistake she is at the beginning of her tenure as us Attorney General purposefully misleading the American public about what her office is doing and she's playing politics I have no problem with the claim if there is a claim that the New York law is unconstitutional then the federal government has every right to make that claim to go to court to Advocate to argue that's what the courts are there for but the grand standing is kind of nonsense the grand standing that she's brought charges and we did it in Illinois and now we going to do it in New York and if you're in another state you're next everybody should relax everybody should relax it's a conlaw argument it's going to get settled in court Governor Kathy hok put out a statement said essentially the same thing her statement says earlier today attorney general Pam Bondi marched in front of the television cameras for a dramatic media briefing to announce she was filing charges against New York State related to our immigration laws hours later when legal papers were shared with reporters we learned this with smoke and mirrors the Department of Justice was filing a routine civil action about a law passed in 2019 that has been upheld by the courts time and again I don't know about whether or not it's been upheld by the courts time and again I actually haven't researched that but I agree with the smoke and mirrors com comment that is true um here are the facts our current laws allow Federal immigration officials to access any DMV database with a Judicial warrant that's a common sense approach that most New Yorkers support but there's no way I'm letting federal agents or Elon musk's shadowy Dodge operation get unfettered access to the personal data of any New Yorker in the DMV system like 16-year-old kids learning to drive and other vulnerable people we expect Pam bondi's worthless publicity driven lawsuit to be a total failure just like all the others let let me be clear New York is not backing down so tough guy talk begets tough guy talk and you get Grand standing on the other side uh substantively Kathy hoko may be correct and I certainly understand the concept she's saying you can get this information with a search warrant if there's a valid reason to get the information but there shouldn't be unfettered access to the federal government for State DMV records that shouldn't be permitted and that's what governor hok was saying and we'll see how it plays out in court uh it will play out it's a civil claim uh we'll see what the court has to say about it we'll keep an eye on it we'll keep an eye on what else is going to go on in this new Administration and the things they are doing I'll be back here to talk about it thanks so much for watching again this is Court authorities don't forget to subscribe to the channel if you haven't don't forget to like this video you can follow me on the social media at lawful riches we'll see you next time for now we are adjourned thank you for watching Court authorities part of the mest touch Network we're at the intersection of law politics and True Crime I'm Dave aronburg aka the Florida law man if you want more of this content hit that subscribe button and we'll see you next time