Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Trending
    • “You Should’ve Heard Them Sing…” — In a dimly lit room far from palace walls and public eyes, something unforgettable unfolded. Princes William and Harry, estranged by years of distance and duty, reunited for the first and only time this year—not for diplomacy, but for love. It was their mother’s 63rd birthday, and they chose to honor her not with speeches or ceremony, but with something far more personal: silence, song, and memory. Inside a quiet London hotel suite, with only a piano and a flickering candle between them, the brothers shared stories, laughter, and finally, a trembling duet of the song they once sang for Diana as children. Staff standing nearby were said to be frozen by emotion—some sobbing silently—as the future king and his brother, stripped of status, became only sons again. When the final note faded, Harry turned to William and whispered, “She would’ve loved this,” to which William replied, “She never left.” And in that moment, every heart in the room broke—and began to heal.
    • Kenny Chesney and Grace Potter sang one song that was never officially released and fans swear it’s better than You and Tequila
    • You thought “Worst Way” was s*xy before? Riley Green just made it completely unhinged with a music video that has fans literally gasping.
    • Jelly Roll stopped mid-performance and broke down in front of thousands; what this young girl held in her hands will destroy you
    • At 79, Dolly Parton Quietly Returns Alone to Her Childhood Cabin in the Smoky Mountains, Tracing the Walls Her Father Once Patched and Whispering Through Tears That After a Life of Glitter and Gold, the True Treasure Was Always Here in These Silent Hills
    • After Saying ‘Ain’t That the Damn Truth,’ Ella Langley Turned the Stevie Nicks Classic Into a Raw Confession You Had to Hear
    • Over 250,000 Troops Heard Him Sing, But Only Now Are We Learning What Toby Keith Risked to Reach Them
    • Donald Trump dementia fears spike as doctor makes new dire claims
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Daily Stories
    • Home
    • News
    • Conservative
    • Magazine
    • Health
    • Animals
    • English
    Daily Stories
    Home » Justice Dept. Fires Career Prosecutors On Jack Smith’s Team For Lack of ‘Trust
    News

    Justice Dept. Fires Career Prosecutors On Jack Smith’s Team For Lack of ‘Trust

    Kelly WhitewoodBy Kelly WhitewoodFebruary 4, 20253 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Washington— The Justice Department fired seven career lawyers prosecuting Donald Trump on Monday, increasing the president’s revenge against his perceived enemies.

    The employees worked on special counsel Jack Smith’s probe that resulted to now-dismissed indictments against Trump for his handling of secret data and his efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat before the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.

    Today, Acting Attorney General James McHenry fired several DOJ personnel who helped prosecute President Trump, a Justice Department official told NBC News. The Acting Attorney General does not trust these officials to faithfully follow the President’s agenda based on their behavior. This supports the goal of ending government weaponization.”

    A source told NBC News that career prosecutors Molly Gaston, J.P. Cooney, Anne McNamara, and Mary Dohrmann were fired.

    Smith resigned this month before Trump’s inauguration. Trump’s re-election terminated federal criminal cases against him due to the Justice Department’s longstanding ban on prosecuting sitting presidents.

    Trump has only been convicted in Manhattan Attorney General Alvin Bragg’s hush money case. This month, Trump was sentenced to a penalty-free unconditional discharge, becoming the first convicted felon president.

    In December, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was removed from the Georgia election interference case due to conflict-of-interest charges, halting the trial indefinitely.

    Trump claimed throughout the 2024 campaign that all probes were politically driven “witch hunts.” He said Democrats “weaponized” the Justice Department to hurt his re-election bid.

    Smith and former Attorney General Merrick Garland rejected political motives in the investigations. They alleged Trump’s actions led to criminal probes into the Jan. 6 incident and his failure to surrender secret records to the National Archives.

    Old Justice Department officials and legal experts have argued that Trump shouldn’t retaliate against career civil servants who were performing their jobs and were often assigned to probes. They warned retaliating against Trump case career prosecutors would chill the Justice Department workforce and hinder future investigations of public leaders’ wrongdoing.

    “Firing prosecutors because of cases they were assigned is just unacceptable,” said former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance, an NBC News legal commentator. “It’s anti-law; anti-democracy.”

    A Justice Department official told NBC News: “He’s playing with casino and house money. If rights are violated, the government’s payout will pale in comparison. He’ll let the government pay.”

    In the firing letter, the employees were cited for probing Trump. NBC News reported that the letter claimed, “You played a significant role in prosecuting President Trump.” The trust top officials have in their subordinates is crucial to government functioning. Your big role in prosecuting the president makes me doubt the department’s leadership can trust you to implement the president’s objectives.

    The letter states that federal employees can appeal discipline decisions to the Merit Systems Protection Board.

    Julie Zebrak, a federal employment law specialist and former Justice Department lawyer, said career government workers cannot be fired.

    “They have civil service rights. People have due process rights, she noted.

    If the Justice Department claims the lawyers are underperforming, they must face progressive discipline, including warnings and notice, she said. Let them hire lawyers before losing their employment.

    “There is a reason people say it’s so hard to fire federal employees,” she remarked.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleTeenage girl dies of cancer – when her mom looks at her coffin, her heart is filled with warmth
    Next Article 11-Year-Old Girl, Who Underwent Life-Saving Treatment, & Her Mother, 31, Identified Among 7 Fatalities in Philadelphia Plane Crash – Details

    Related Posts

    “You Should’ve Heard Them Sing…” — In a dimly lit room far from palace walls and public eyes, something unforgettable unfolded. Princes William and Harry, estranged by years of distance and duty, reunited for the first and only time this year—not for diplomacy, but for love. It was their mother’s 63rd birthday, and they chose to honor her not with speeches or ceremony, but with something far more personal: silence, song, and memory. Inside a quiet London hotel suite, with only a piano and a flickering candle between them, the brothers shared stories, laughter, and finally, a trembling duet of the song they once sang for Diana as children. Staff standing nearby were said to be frozen by emotion—some sobbing silently—as the future king and his brother, stripped of status, became only sons again. When the final note faded, Harry turned to William and whispered, “She would’ve loved this,” to which William replied, “She never left.” And in that moment, every heart in the room broke—and began to heal.

    July 10, 2025

    Kenny Chesney and Grace Potter sang one song that was never officially released and fans swear it’s better than You and Tequila

    July 10, 2025

    You thought “Worst Way” was s*xy before? Riley Green just made it completely unhinged with a music video that has fans literally gasping.

    July 10, 2025
    Search
    Categories
    • News (2,790)
    Categories
    • News (2,790)
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    Copyright © 2025, News24. All Rights Reserved.

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