Prosecutor
Who Rejected Trump’s Pressure to Charge James Is Fired
The
dismissal was the latest fallout from attempts by career Justice Department
officials to impede the president’s wide-ranging campaign of retribution. The
prosecutor’s deputy was also fired.
Alan
Feuer Tyler
Pager Devlin
Barrett
By Alan
FeuerTyler Pager and Devlin Barrett
Oct. 17,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/17/us/politics/trump-prosecutor-fired-letitia-james.html
A federal
prosecutor who resisted President Trump’s demands to bring charges against
Letitia James, the New York state attorney general, was fired along with her
deputy on Friday evening, according to three people familiar with the matter.
The
dismissal of the prosecutor, Elizabeth Yusi, was the latest fallout from
attempts by career Justice Department officials to pump the brakes on Mr.
Trump’s wide-ranging efforts to seek retribution against his perceived
political opponents.
Ms. Yusi,
who oversaw major criminal cases in the Norfolk office of the U.S. attorney’s
office for the Eastern District of Virginia, had pushed back against Mr.
Trump’s public calls for Ms. James to be indicted, telling colleagues that she
had not found probable cause to file charges, the people familiar with the
matter said. It was not immediately clear why her deputy, Kristin G. Bird, had
also been fired.
The
Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Despite
the concerns career prosecutors raised about the case, Mr. Trump’s
inexperienced handpicked choice to lead the prosecutors’ office, Lindsey
Halligan, secured an indictment against Ms. James last week, accusing her of
mortgage fraud. The indictment said Ms. James had falsely claimed in loan
documents that she would use a home she had purchased in Norfolk, Va., as a
secondary residence, but instead had used it as a rental property, allowing her
to receive favorable terms that saved her close to $19,000.
The
firings of Ms. Yusi and Ms. Bird came less than a month after Ms. Halligan’s
predecessor, Erik S. Siebert, resigned under pressure from Mr. Trump. Mr.
Siebert, who had been chosen by the president to run the office, had taken a
stand against his desire to seek charges against another of his adversaries:
James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director.
In the
end, Ms. Halligan did Mr. Trump’s bidding in that case, too, personally
presenting a case to a grand jury last month and securing an indictment against
Mr. Comey that accused him of lying to Congress and obstructing a congressional
proceeding.
The U.S.
attorney’s office in the Eastern District of Virginia, which has traditionally
handled some of the country’s most significant terrorism and national security
cases, has been battered by dismissals and resignations, stemming from the
cases against Ms. James and Mr. Comey. Ms. James and Mr. Comey have both denied
the charges against them.
Maya
Song, the office’s former first assistant U.S. attorney, was fired in the wake
of Mr. Comey’s indictment, as was her replacement, Maggie Cleary, a well-known
conservative lawyer in Virginia.
Mr.
Comey’s son-in-law, Troy Edwards Jr., who handled national security cases,
resigned in protest shortly after the indictment was returned. And Mr.
Edwards’s boss, Michael P. Ben’Ary, was dismissed after a pro-Trump social
media influencer wrongly accused him in an online post of having questioned the
indictment of Mr. Comey.
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.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Devlin
Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.


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