The report calls Trump's claims that the special counsel was influenced by Biden for political reasons "laughable."
The DOJ official argued that the firings are in line with the Trump administration’s “mission of ending the weaponization of government.”
The Trump Justice Department says it has fired more than a dozen employees who worked on criminal investigations into President Donald Trump.
The acting attorney general fired more than a dozen officials who assisted special counsel Jack Smith's prosecutions against President Donald Trump.
The first volume of special counsel Jack Smith's report on the 2020 election case against President Trump was released last week.
The U.S. Department of Justice under President Donald Trump’s Acting Attorney General, James McHenry, on Monday reportedly fired career prosecutors who worked for Special Counsel Jack Smith and were involved in the criminal prosecution of Donald Trump.
Several federal prosecutors who worked with former special counsel Jack Smith on criminal investigations related to Trump were fired on Monday
With Matt Eberflus returning to Chicago in 2025, here's how the Bears have fared when facing their past head coaches as either head coaches or coordinators after they departed Chicago.
In a letter to Acting Attorney General James McHenry, House Judiciary Committee ranking Democrat Jamie Raskin and House Oversight Ranking Democrat Gerald Connolly demanded a list of all affected Justice Department employees and an explanation for why they were reassigned or fired.
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In termination letters sent to more than a dozen officials, acting Attorney General James McHenry wrote that he did not believe they 'could be trusted to faithfully implement the President's agenda.'