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DOJ rocked by wave of Trump firings

DOJ rocked by wave of Trump firings

The Justice Department has been rocked by a wave of recent firings, a sign the administration is not done culling the ranks of career officials as it seeks to shape the department under a second Trump term. 

Maurene Comey, a New York-based federal prosecutor and the daughter of the former FBI director, was fired Wednesday without explanation.

And news broke this week that the Justice Department also fired immigration court Judge Jennifer Peyton, who served as head of the Chicago immigration court system, shortly after the jurist gave a tour to Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), ranking member of the Judiciary Committee.

Those firings come on the heels of the dismissal of at least 20 staffers who worked under special counsel Jack Smith, a group that includes not only attorneys but also support staff and even U.S. Marshals.

Attorney General Pam Bondi last week also fired the top career ethics official at the department, Joseph Tirrell, the latest in a string of ethics officials pushed out under President Trump.

“Every time I think we’re at some point when the firings are over, there’s another wave. So I would predict we’ll see more,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

“It’s more dedicated career professionals being given walking papers when they really deserve to be elevated and empowered. And to fire the ethics attorney, I think, speaks volumes about where she’s taking the department,” Blumenthal said.

Justice Connection, a network of the department’s alumni dedicated to protecting “colleagues who are under attack,” estimate that more than 200 employees have been terminated at DOJ, a figure that includes firings at the FBI and other agencies, as well as prosecutors that worked on the cases of Jan. 6 rioters at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in D.C.

“The senseless terminations at the Justice Department are growing exponentially. The very institution created to enforce the law is trampling over the civil service laws enacted by Congress. It’s shameful, and it’s devastating the workforce,” Stacey Young, executive director and founder of the group, said in a statement to The Hill

“DOJ leadership is making clear the ability to keep your job is not tied to your performance, your expertise, or your commitment to uphold and defend the Constitution. Those who remain at the department are now worried about how to uphold their professional ethical standards when it seems that their willingness to do whatever they are ordered matters more than any other aspect of their work.”

The Justice Department declined to comment on personnel matters.

Many of the attorneys that were fired have received brief letters saying they were terminated under the authority of the second article of the constitution, the one that establishes the presidency.

A letter from Comey to her colleagues referenced the guiding ethos of the Justice Department: to pursue cases “without fear or favor.”

“Our focus was really on acting ‘without favor.’ That is, making sure people with access, money, and power were not treated differently than anyone else; and making sure this office remained separate from politics and focused only on the facts and the law,” Comey said in the memo, adding, “but we have entered a new phase where ‘without fear’ may be the challenge.” 

In the case of Peyton, Durbin said he sees a direct line between the tour she gave him – something he called a routine oversight visit – and her termination.

“Judge Peyton took time to show me the court and explain its functions. Soon after, she received an email from Department of Justice political appointees. The email claimed that immigration judges should not directly communicate with members of Congress and congressional staff and required all communications from congressional offices to be forwarded to headquarters for review and response,” Durbin said in a Tuesday email.

“Judge Peyton was fired soon after. Her abrupt termination is an abuse of power by the Administration to punish a non-political judge simply for doing her job.”

On Smith’s team, the recent firings make for at least 37 staffers who have been dismissed, according to Reuters. 

And on the ethics front, beyond Terrill, Jeffrey Ragsdale, the head of the Office of Professional Responsibility, which reviews the conduct of attorneys in the department, was fired in March. Brad Weinsheimer, another top ethics official, resigned after he was reassigned to a new working group focused on cracking down on sanctuary cities.

Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), also a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he sees two primary patterns.

“This is Pam Bondi attempting to go after all the president’s perceived political enemies, to go after dedicated prosecutors who brought cases successfully to conviction. It’s also part of the broader effort to completely rewrite history about Jan. 6,” he told The Hill, adding that he expects more firing of those “deemed insufficiently pro-MAGA.”

He then listed a string of officials inside and outside of DOJ that have been fired under Trump, including the heads of the Office of the Special Counsel and the Office of Government Ethics.

“They seem to be doing everything they can to eviscerate any kind of watchdog or ethical oversight – clearly part of a pattern of trying to eliminate all accountability,” said Schiff, who sent a letter to Bondi this week asking for more details on Terrill’s firings and plans to comply with ethics guidelines at the department. 

Beyond the firings, many Justice Department lawyers have left the department of their own accord, with several sharing with The Hill they feared being asked to do something illegal or would be forced to defend unlawful actions.

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, said the result is a culture of fear at the Justice Department.

“The Department of Justice is now a joke. When you look at the history of a once storied and legendary department, Pam Bondi has defined her job as doing whatever Donald Trump wants. She’s completely sycophantic and subservient. And there may be some lawyers still left in the building who are trying to do their jobs in an honest way consistent with professional ethics, but everything has been supported, subordinated to the political will of Donald Trump,” he told The Hill. 

“It’s a tough thing for the real lawyers who are still there, and they express a lot of fear and anxiety about where the DOJ is going.”

He added that some Republican colleagues, largely former prosecutors, have privately expressed concern over the firings.

“I have had Republican colleagues who were former federal prosecutors telling me privately that they are absolutely appalled that United States assistant attorneys are being fired because they worked on the January 6 case,” Raskin said.

“Think about the implications of that. People are being fired for doing their jobs well, and their job was bringing cases against people who violently assaulted federal police officers,” he said.

But that concern was not publicly shared by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), the chair of the panel.

“I have confidence in President Trump, confidence in his team at the Justice Department, if that’s what they think is in the best interest of fulfilling their mission, that’s their call,” he told The Hill. 

“I don’t know this particulars about each individual, but if that’s what the attorney general believes is in the best interest of the Justice Department’s mission, that’s fine.”

Comey and Terrill both addressed morale in letters to their colleagues.

Comey said unjustified firings mean “fear may seep into the decisions of those who remain.” 

“Do not let that happen. Fear is the tool of a tyrant, wielded to suppress independent thought. Instead of fear, let this moment fuel the fire that already burns at the heart of this place. A fire of righteous indignation at abuses of power. Of commitment to seek justice for victims. Of dedication to truth above all else,” she wrote.

Terrill, too, hinted at a call to action from colleagues.

“I believe in the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. – ‘the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice,’’ he wrote in a post on LinkedIn that included his brief termination notice.

“I also believe that Edmund Burke is right and that ‘the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good people to do nothing.’

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