Close Menu
All Hail Trump
  • Home
  • Donald Trump
  • Hub
  • Latest News
  • Life
  • More Today
  • Policies
  • Today’s latest
    • Top Stories & Analysis
  • Politics

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

Donald Trump Reacts to Finding Out Sydney Sweeney is a Republican

August 5, 2025

Trump urges China and India to halt Russian oil purchases

August 5, 2025

How Eliminating Capital Gains on Home Sales Could Impact Housing Market

August 5, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
All Hail TrumpAll Hail Trump
  • Home
  • Donald Trump
  • Hub
  • Latest News
  • Life
  • More Today
  • Policies
  • Today’s latest
    • Top Stories & Analysis
  • Politics
All Hail Trump
Home»Top Stories & Analysis»Trump News and Live Updates: President Says He’s ‘Not Joking’ About a Third Term
Top Stories & Analysis

Trump News and Live Updates: President Says He’s ‘Not Joking’ About a Third Term

Robert JonesBy Robert JonesMarch 31, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Two longtime career prosecutors have been suddenly fired by the White House, in what current and former Justice Department officials called an unusual and alarming exercise of presidential power.

In recent days, the prosecutors, in Los Angeles and Memphis, were dismissed abruptly, notified by a terse one-sentence email stating no reason for the move other than that it was on behalf of the president himself.

The ousters reflected a more aggressive effort by the White House to reach deep inside U.S. attorney offices across the country in a stark departure from decades of practice. While it is commonplace and accepted for senior political appointees at the Justice Department to change from administration to administration, no department veteran could recall any similar removal of assistant U.S. attorneys.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

Asked about the ousters and whether others had been let go in a similar fashion, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said, “The White House, in coordination with the Department of Justice, has dismissed more than 50 U.S. attorneys and deputies in the past few weeks.”

She added, “The American people deserve a judicial branch full of honest arbiters of the law who want to protect democracy, not subvert it,” offering no explanation for how either of the two fired prosecutors might have done that. Prosecutors are part of the executive, not judicial, branch of government.

During his campaign, Mr. Trump vowed to drastically reshape the ranks of career Justice Department officials, aggrieved by the investigation into his campaign’s ties to Russia in his first term and the four criminal indictments between his presidencies.

His allies and advisers have embraced the “unitary executive theory,” by which, its supporters argue, the president has sole control of the executive branch. His supporters have spoken openly about seizing pockets of independence in the executive branch. The Justice Department has a post-Watergate tradition of independence, buttressed by civil service laws that for many decades have protected career employees from summary dismissal by political leaders.

Already, the new administration has aggressively sought to remove the upper level of career lawyers at the Justice Department’s headquarters. Some of those firings may end up the subject of lawsuits, but even those dismissals were carried out by senior department officials, albeit Trump appointees.

Mr. Trump’s team has been screening people across the government, asking a series of questions that appear aimed at testing loyalty to the president and his worldview, including his false claim that he won the 2020 election.

The two prosecutors had both worked for many years as career officials inside the Justice Department.

Adam Schleifer, who until last week worked as a career prosecutor at the Justice Department, in Peekskill, N.Y., in 2020. He ran for Congress in New York during the 2020 campaign cycle.Credit…Mark Vergari/The Journal News, via Imagn

One of the prosecutors, Adam Schleifer, was sitting at his computer Friday morning in Los Angeles, working on a case against Andrew Wiederhorn, the founder of Fatburger, according to two people familiar with the events who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. Mr. Wiederhorn is fighting charges of wire fraud and other crimes related to his company.

While he was writing, he received an email from a White House official, Saurabh Sharma, saying that he had been terminated, one of the people said. No reason was cited.

Shocked and confused by the message, Mr. Schleifer asked supervisors if the email was some kind of hoax, the people said. He quickly discovered his work phone had been reset and he could no longer use office devices.

Mr. Schleifer, who worked in the corporate and securities fraud strike force, had spent years working on the Fatburger fraud case. Given that the case has drawn headlines recently and that Mr. Wiederhorn has donated to political action committees supporting Mr. Trump, his colleagues suspected that may have played a role in his dismissal.

During the 2020 campaign cycle, Mr. Schleifer ran as a Democrat for Congress in New York. In that period, he occasionally took to social media to accuse Mr. Trump of denigrating the rule of law.

Still, he returned to the Justice Department at the tail end of the first Trump administration, just before Mr. Trump left office. But those social media posts were amplified by allies of the Trump White House last week, as Mr. Schleifer found himself dismissed.

Exactly one hour before he received the termination email, the far-right influencer Laura Loomer posted on social media about Mr. Schleifer, calling him a “Biden holdover” and referring to a five-year-old message of his in which he praised Adam B. Schiff, now a Democratic senator of California, and criticized Mr. Trump.

Many of Mr. Schleifer’s colleagues were fearful about what his dismissal signaled for the tradition not just of Justice Department independence, but of the independence of individual U.S. attorney offices, the two people said.

Current and former colleagues described Mr. Schleifer as an accomplished and fair prosecutor.

“Adam is a very smart, hard-working, impartial prosecutor. He is very dedicated to the job,” said Consuelo S. Woodhead, a retired federal prosecutor. “The man is honest. He is the kind of prosecutor one would want in a U.S. attorney’s office.”

Reagan Fondren, who until last week had been the acting U.S. attorney for the Western District of Tennessee, speaking at a news conference in Memphis in December.Credit…George Walker Iv/Associated Press

A day before Mr. Schleifer’s firing, a career attorney in Memphis, Reagan Fondren, received a similar email, saying that she had been terminated, according to a person familiar with events in her office, speaking on the condition of anonymity to publicly discuss the matter. Like Mr. Schleifer, she also was not given a reason. At the time, Ms. Fondren had been serving as the acting U.S. attorney, a situation that is not unusual in the early days of a new presidential administration.

Mr. Schleifer’s dismissal was earlier reported by The Los Angeles Times and Ms. Fondren’s by the Daily Memphian.

While it is not unusual for acting U.S. attorneys to lose that position once a new administration selects a permanent successor, a career official like Ms. Fondren would typically return to her regular prosecutor position. In this instance, however, she was fired by the White House.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Robert Jones

Related Posts

How Trump and MAGA Fans Are Talking About the Epstein Case

July 17, 2025

What We Know (and Can’t Know) About Trump’s Wealth

July 2, 2025

Comparing How the House and Senate Bills Deliver on Trump’s Agenda

June 28, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Our Picks

Donald Trump Reacts to Finding Out Sydney Sweeney is a Republican

August 5, 2025

Trump urges China and India to halt Russian oil purchases

August 5, 2025

How Eliminating Capital Gains on Home Sales Could Impact Housing Market

August 5, 2025

Pam Bondi orders grand jury probe of Obama administration review of 2016 election

August 5, 2025
Don't Miss

Pam Bondi orders grand jury probe of Obama administration review of 2016 election

Donald Trump August 5, 2025

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks as she announces an immigration enforcement action during her…

Palantir PLTR Q2 earnings 2025

August 4, 2025

American Eagle Sydney Sweeney campaign ‘hottest ad’: Trump

August 4, 2025

EU will delay planned U.S. tariffs for six months

August 4, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 allhailtrump. Designed by allhailtrump.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.