Could the dropping of charges clear the way for the release of the special counsel’s report on the prosecution?
EXCLUSIVE: A previously identified anti-Trump FBI agent allegedly broke protocol and played a critical role in opening and advancing the bureau’s original investigation related to the 2020 election, tying President Trump to the probe without sufficient predication.
The investigation into Trump was formally opened by the FBI on April 13, 2022, and was known inside the agency as "Arctic Frost."
The DOJ official argued that the firings are in line with the Trump administration’s “mission of ending the weaponization of government.”
Trump fires DOJ officials who worked with Jack Smith as probe launched into Jan 6 prosecutions: Live - Justice Department officials who prosecuted Trump removed because they cannot be ‘trusted’ to ‘faithfully’ implement president’s agenda.
President Donald Trump had been charged with crimes by special counsel Jack Smith in cases related to the 2020 election and classified documents.
I spent much of the past two years following and applauding the efforts of special counsel Jack Smith ... any office under the United States.” Because of this penalty, Smith may have been ...
Judge Aileen M. Cannon ruled that special counsel Jack Smith was unlawfully appointed and had no authority to prosecute Donald Trump.
The single guiding fact of Jack Smith's prosecution — that he was working to indict, try, convict and jail Trump before the 2024 election — was something he could never,
Special counsel firings: The acting attorney general, James McHenry, fired more than a dozen prosecutors who worked with Special Counsel Jack Smith ... of the United States’ defense capabilities ...
President Donald Trump fired more than a dozen employees at the Department of Justice on Monday because of their roles in his federal prosecutions. The post Trump Fires More Than a Dozen DOJ Employees Because They ‘Played a Significant Role in Prosecuting’ Him first appeared on Mediaite.
President Donald Trump has thrown the Justice Department’s Jan. 6 Capitol riot prosecutions out the window. But a week before Trump became president, the Department essentially did the same