Trump
Demands That Bondi Move ‘Now’ to Prosecute Foes
His
demand came a day after he ousted the federal prosecutor who failed to charge
two of his most-reviled adversaries, Letitia James and James B. Comey.
Alan
Feuer Glenn
Thrush Maggie
Haberman Devlin Barrett
By Alan
FeuerGlenn ThrushMaggie Haberman and Devlin Barrett
Sept. 20,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/20/us/politics/trump-justice-department-us-attorneys.html
President
Trump demanded on Saturday that his attorney general move quickly to prosecute
figures he considers his enemies, the latest blow to the Justice Department’s
tradition of independence.
“We can’t
delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility,” Mr. Trump wrote
in a social media post addressed to “Pam,” meaning Attorney General Pam Bondi.
“They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE
MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”
Mr. Trump
named James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director; Senator Adam B. Schiff,
Democrat of California; and Letitia James, the New York attorney general,
saying he was reading about how they were “all guilty as hell, but nothing is
going to be done.”
Asked
later by reporters about his message for Ms. Bondi, Mr. Trump said, “They have
to act. They have to act fast.”
Even for
a president who has shattered the traditional norms of maintaining distance
from the Justice Department, Mr. Trump’s unabashedly public and explicit orders
to Ms. Bondi were an extraordinary breach of prosecutorial protocols that reach
back to the days following the Watergate scandal.
His
demands came a day after he ousted the federal prosecutor who failed to charge
two of the adversaries he most reviles, Ms. James and Mr. Comey, showing how
far Mr. Trump has gone in exerting personal control over the Justice Department
and breaching the longstanding norm about keeping politics at a distance from
law enforcement.
In a
different social media post later on Saturday, Mr. Trump defended Ms. Bondi,
saying she was doing a “GREAT job,” but that she needed a “tough prosecutor” in
the Eastern District of Virginia, where Erik S. Siebert, was abruptly forced
from his post atop the U.S. attorney’s office on Friday. Mr. Trump said he
would nominate Lindsey Halligan, a special assistant to the president who was
on his personal legal team, to fill the role.
Ms.
Halligan, who spent much of her career as an insurance lawyer, has never been a
prosecutor.
Mr.
Siebert’s exit deepened troubling questions that have arisen in recent months
about the politicization of the Justice Department’s supposedly self-governing
satellite offices.
But it
also raised a blunter and more immediate issue: Which of the nation’s U.S.
attorneys might be next?
Beyond
their efforts to push out Mr. Siebert, whose inquiries into Ms. James and Mr.
Comey effectively fizzled out, administration officials have also ramped up
pressure against Kelly O. Hayes, the U.S. attorney in Maryland, according to
three people familiar with the matter.
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Ms.
Hayes, a career prosecutor who has spent more than a decade in that office, is
leading inquiries into two other vocal critics of Mr. Trump: Mr. Schiff, who has been accused of mortgage fraud by Mr.
Trump’s allies; and John R. Bolton, Mr. Trump’s former national security
adviser, who is facing scrutiny over allegations of mishandling classified
information.
Recently,
Ms. Hayes told associates that she was under no illusions of the pressure she
would face if she refused to bring a case she believed to be unsupported by
evidence, as Mr. Siebert did, according to people with knowledge of those
conversations. And while she signed off last month on asking for a warrant to
search Mr. Bolton’s home in Bethesda, Md., she has indicated that she would not
bring charges against Mr. Schiff unless her team discovered evidence to support
them.
Mr.
Trump’s campaign against U.S. attorneys, who oversee offices in 93 federal
districts across the country, is an extension, even an escalation, of the early
purge that his top political appointees carried out at the Justice Department
headquarters and the F.B.I. against those who worked on the criminal cases
brought against him before he returned to power.
But his
latest demand for the prosecution of his foes also underscores how his desire
for retribution against those who pursued him after his first term remains as
intense as ever, and how he appears to feel less constrained by political and
legal norms in imposing payback.
“I was
indicted five times, it turned out to be a fake deal, and we have to act fast,
one way or the other, one way or the other — they’re guilty, they’re not
guilty, we have to act fast,” Mr. Trump told reporters. “If they’re not guilty,
that’s fine. If they are guilty, or if they should be charged, they should be
charged.”
Given
that these prosecutors’ offices are where federal cases are filed on a
day-to-day basis, the move strikes at the nuts-and-bolts foundations of the
criminal justice system. It seems intended both to create a frictionless path
for prosecutions of those who have run afoul of Mr. Trump, and perhaps to
provide the White House with a tool it could use to set aside or slow cases it
would like to see disappear.
White
House interference in the work of U.S. attorneys was once considered such a
taboo that former Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, who served under
President George W. Bush, resigned in scandal after the Justice Department
fired nine U.S. attorneys in 2006 for what were perceived to be political
reasons.
But Mr.
Trump’s reaction to Mr. Siebert’s ouster could not have been more different.
Several
people, including Ms. Bondi and Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general and
the president’s former defense lawyer, lobbied hard to keep Mr. Siebert in
place, arguing that he had been an efficient and cooperative partner on
immigration and crime enforcement in Washington’s southern suburbs.
But Mr.
Trump responded to repeated entreaties by saying, “I don’t care,” according to
a person with knowledge of the matter. His position seemed to be that he had
been warned several times during his first term about firing U.S. attorneys,
given that it could have put him in jeopardy, and he ended up being
investigated after leaving office anyhow, the person said.
While
U.S. attorneys are appointed by, and serve at the pleasure of, the president,
they like to think of themselves as having some measure of professional
autonomy, said Barbara L. McQuade, a former U.S. attorney in Detroit who
teaches at the University of Michigan Law School. That sense of independence
largely arises from measures put in place in the 1970s, after the Watergate
scandal, dictating that partisan politics should never play a role in a
prosecutor’s decision-making process.
“U.S.
attorneys pride themselves on saying that we act without fear or favor,” Ms.
McQuade said. “But if you see other U.S. attorneys getting fired for failing to
comply with orders from the White House, well, that could lead to fear. And if
you are letting someone off the hook for political reasons, well, that is
favor. Both are inappropriate.”
For now,
Mr. Siebert will be replaced by Mary Cleary, a conservative lawyer active in
Republican politics who has served as a local prosecutor in Culpeper County,
Va., according to an email she sent staff members at the office on Saturday.
Her email did not mention her predecessor or his predicament, saying only that
“the Eastern District of Virginia has a distinguished legacy upon which we will
build.”
It was
unusual enough when Mr. Trump, at the start of his term, placed a team of his
own personal lawyers, including Mr. Blanche, in key positions at the Justice
Department.
It was
even more unusual, however, that the president ignored the advice of those
officials in favor of others who have limited or no experience at all in
handling criminal cases: Ed Martin, the self-described captain of the Justice
Department’s weaponization working group, which was created to go after Mr.
Trump’s enemies, and William J. Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency.
Mr. Pulte
had been pushing Mr. Trump for weeks to get rid of Mr. Siebert and was joined
by Mr. Martin in delivering a message intended to prompt a dismissal, according
to people familiar with the situation. Mr. Siebert, the two men told the
president, had for some time been blocking efforts to subject Ms. James to the
punishment he desired.
That
message gained new urgency this week after Mr. Siebert encountered a
significant hurdle in his separate investigation of Mr. Comey for allegedly
lying in testimony to Congress. That inquiry — said to be based on testimony
that Mr. Comey gave to the Senate Judiciary Committee in September 2020 — was
under additional pressure because it was set to bump up against the statute of
limitations within 10 days.
Chris
Christie, the erstwhile Trump ally and former governor who once served as U.S.
attorney in New Jersey, said that decisions about criminal prosecutions should
be made by people with the requisite résumé and training, and that Mr. Trump
was “clearly not qualified” to make such decisions “in either respect.”
“When the
decisions are made by someone who has neither the education nor the experience
to make those decisions, people immediately jump to the conclusion that they’re
being made for reasons that have nothing to do with the law,” Mr. Christie said
in a brief interview. “And that’s the type of slippery slope that we cannot
have our criminal justice system go down.”
A
spokesman for the Justice Department declined to comment.
Since
returning to office, Mr. Trump and his allies have often sought to justify
their attacks on U.S. attorneys by claiming that the justice system under
President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had been weaponized against his predecessor.
Still,
there is no evidence that federal law enforcement officials in the Biden
administration were strong-armed into bringing or dropping prosecutions for
what were overtly political reasons. Nor were there any high-profile
resignations by U.S. attorneys under Mr. Biden that were similar to Mr.
Siebert’s resignation on Friday.
During
his first term, Mr. Trump occasionally inserted himself into the affairs of
U.S. attorney’s offices, but was often held back from doing so by his allies
and advisers. In one high-profile episode, he fired Geoffrey S. Berman, the
U.S. attorney in Manhattan, whose office handled case after case that rankled
him, including those against two of his personal lawyers.
After his
return to power, Mr. Trump and his top political appointees quickly moved to
step into high-profile legal matters.
In an
early example, top Justice Department officials ordered the dismissal of a
federal bribery case against Mayor Eric Adams of New York, overruling local
prosecutors in Manhattan and prompting the resignation of the U.S. attorney
there. Ms. Bondi personally intervened in a different case in Utah in July,
ordering local prosecutors to drop the charges against a doctor accused of
selling fake Covid vaccination cards.
Administration
officials have also used a series of arcane legal maneuvers in an effort to
have Mr. Trump’s nominees run federal prosecutors’ offices in New Jersey and
Delaware after their temporary terms ran out, and despite federal judges in
those districts using their lawful powers to oppose the candidates.
A federal
judge in New Jersey found that those maneuvers were unconstitutional and that
Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer, Alina Habba, had been in her position there
unlawfully since July.
Moreover,
a handful of top federal prosecutors handling sensitive cases have resigned in
recent months under curious circumstances.
In
August, Todd Gilbert, the former U.S. attorney in the Western District of
Virginia, left his post one month after taking the job as prosecutors under him
conducted a related investigation into Mr. Comey. And in May, Ben Schrader, a
top prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office in Nashville, quit just before the
office filed charges against Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, the immigrant who
was wrongfully deported to El Salvador in March and then returned to U.S. soil
to face indictment.
Tyler
Pager contributed reporting.
Alan
Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the
criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former
President Donald J. Trump.
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written
about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and
prisons.
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
Devlin
Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.


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