Weaponization of the Department of Justice: Retaliatory Investigations and Prosecutions

Systematic weaponization of the DOJ through a retaliatory investigations unit, indictments of political opponents that were dismissed as brought by an unlawfully appointed prosecutor, mass departure of career prosecutors, and dismantlement of the Civil Rights Division and Public Integrity Section.

The Trump administration established a 'Weaponization Working Group' at the DOJ led by political loyalist Ed Martin, fired over 20 DOJ officials who worked on Trump investigations, indicted political opponents Letitia James and James Comey on charges later dismissed as brought by an unlawfully appointed prosecutor, gutted the Civil Rights Division (70% of lawyers departed), dismantled the Public Integrity Section, and drove over 100 prosecutors to resign citing political interference — constituting the most aggressive politicization of federal law enforcement in modern American history.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • Trump appointed Ed Martin — a former Missouri party chair who promoted election fraud claims and defended January 6 rioters — to lead a DOJ 'Weaponization Working Group' tasked with investigating officials who had investigated Trump.
  • Former FBI Director James Comey was indicted September 25, 2025, and New York AG Letitia James was indicted October 9, 2025. Both indictments were dismissed on November 24, 2025 by Judge Currie, who found prosecutor Lindsey Halligan — a former Trump defense lawyer — was unlawfully appointed. Two subsequent grand juries declined to reindict James.
  • Over 100 DOJ prosecutors and career lawyers resigned since Trump took office, far exceeding normal turnover, with many citing political interference, pressure to drop cases involving Trump allies, and threats of retaliation for refusing unethical orders.
  • 70% of DOJ Civil Rights Division lawyers departed by May 2025. Division head Harmeet Dhillon issued new mission statements redirecting resources to 'Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias,' 'Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports,' and 'Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation.' Remaining voting section attorneys were directed to dismiss all active voting rights cases.
  • Trump fired over 20 DOJ officials who had worked on criminal investigations of the president, fired the head of the Office of the Pardon Attorney, and largely dismantled the Public Integrity Section that investigates political corruption.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. DOJ officials fired for investigating Trump

    The administration fires over 20 DOJ officials who had worked on criminal investigations of the president.

  2. Weaponization Working Group established

    Trump appointee Ed Martin, a former Missouri party chair who promoted election fraud claims, is appointed to lead a DOJ 'Weaponization Working Group' tasked with scrutinizing officials who investigated Trump.

  3. 70% of Civil Rights Division lawyers gone

    NPR reports that approximately 250 attorneys — 70% of the division's lawyers — have left or will leave the DOJ Civil Rights Division. Division head Harmeet Dhillon celebrates the departures.

  4. James Comey indicted

    Former FBI Director James Comey is indicted by Lindsey Halligan, a former Trump defense lawyer serving as interim US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.

  5. Letitia James indicted

    New York AG Letitia James is indicted on bank fraud and false statements charges. Her lawyers argue the case is vindictive prosecution to punish her for investigating and suing Trump.

  6. Both indictments dismissed

    Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismisses both the Comey and James indictments, finding that prosecutor Lindsey Halligan was unlawfully appointed in violation of Section 546 and the Appointments Clause.

  7. Grand jury refuses to reindict James

    A grand jury declines to bring a new indictment against Letitia James. A second grand jury also declines, marking two consecutive failures to reindict.

  8. Former employees declare Civil Rights Division 'destroyed'

    200 former DOJ employees publish a letter stating the administration has made a 'coordinated effort' to undermine career staff and that the Civil Rights Division has been 'destroyed.'

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

The Trump administration undertook the most aggressive politicization of the Department of Justice in modern American history, establishing a unit dedicated to investigating those who investigated the president, indicting political opponents on charges later found to be brought by an unlawfully appointed prosecutor, driving unprecedented departures of career attorneys, and systematically dismantling the divisions responsible for enforcing civil rights and investigating political corruption.

The Weaponization Working Group

Early in his second term, Trump installed Ed Martin to lead a "Weaponization Working Group" at DOJ. Martin — a former Missouri Republican party chair who promoted Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen and defended January 6 rioters — was tasked with investigating law enforcement officials who had previously investigated Trump. Martin publicly promised to charge Trump's political enemies with crimes "wherever possible" and said he would "name and shame" those who could not be charged.

Retaliatory Indictments

The administration's prosecution campaign targeted Trump's most prominent legal antagonists:

Letitia James: The New York Attorney General, who won a $454 million civil fraud judgment against Trump, was indicted on October 9, 2025, on charges of bank fraud related to a personal property purchase. Her lawyers filed a motion arguing the prosecution was "vindictive," pointing to Trump's repeated public demands that she be prosecuted. Judge Cameron Currie dismissed the indictment on November 24, finding prosecutor Lindsey Halligan was unlawfully appointed. The DOJ tried twice more — two separate grand juries in Norfolk and Alexandria, Virginia both declined to reindict.

James Comey: The former FBI Director who led the initial Russia investigation was indicted on September 25, 2025. His indictment was also dismissed on November 24 on the same grounds — Halligan's unlawful appointment. As of March 2026, the Miami US Attorney's office has subpoenaed Comey related to an alleged "grand conspiracy" case.

Both indictments were brought by Lindsey Halligan, a former insurance lawyer who had served on Trump's criminal defense team, whom the judge found was appointed to the interim US Attorney position in violation of both federal statute (Section 546) and the Constitution's Appointments Clause.

Gutting the Civil Rights Division

The DOJ Civil Rights Division — the government's primary mechanism for enforcing voting rights, combating police misconduct, and protecting civil rights — was systematically hollowed out:

  • By May 2025, approximately 250 attorneys — 70% of the division's lawyers — had departed, with nearly 400 people including 75% of attorneys gone by year's end.
  • Division head Harmeet Dhillon issued new mission statements replacing civil rights enforcement with Trump policy priorities: "Eradicating Anti-Christian Bias," "Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports," and "Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation."
  • Remaining voting section attorneys were reportedly directed to dismiss all active voting rights cases.
  • The division halted investigations into unconstitutional policing and announced the closure of police pattern-or-practice investigations.
  • Former employees — 200 in total — published a public letter declaring the division had been "destroyed" and that the administration was making a "coordinated effort to undermine career staff."

Dismantling Accountability Infrastructure

The administration also destroyed the DOJ's capacity to investigate political corruption:

  • The Public Integrity Section — responsible for investigating corruption by public officials — was largely dismantled.
  • The head of the Office of the Pardon Attorney was fired and replaced with a political loyalist.
  • Over 100 prosecutors and career lawyers resigned, far exceeding normal turnover, citing political interference and threats of retaliation for refusing unethical orders.

International Law Concerns

Fair trial and prosecutorial independence (ICCPR Article 14): The use of prosecution to punish political opponents — particularly where the president publicly demands indictments and the appointed prosecutor was his own former defense lawyer — violates the requirement for independent and impartial administration of justice. The UN Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary extend to the prosecution function.

Equal protection (ICCPR Article 26): Selective prosecution of individuals based on their political opposition to the president, rather than neutral application of criminal law, violates equal protection guarantees.

Liberty and security of person (ICCPR Article 9): Retaliatory arrest and prosecution of political opponents — where the president has publicly stated his desire for their prosecution before any investigation — constitutes arbitrary deprivation of liberty.

Why This Entry Is Rated Severe

  • Direct political prosecution: The indictments of James and Comey were brought by a prosecutor who was the president's own former defense lawyer, following repeated public demands by the president that they be prosecuted — the clearest case of retaliatory prosecution in modern American history.
  • Judicial confirmation: A federal judge dismissed both indictments, finding the prosecutor unlawfully appointed, and two grand juries refused to reindict James — confirming the weakness of the underlying cases.
  • Institutional destruction: The loss of 70% of Civil Rights Division lawyers and the dismantlement of the Public Integrity Section eliminated the government's capacity to enforce civil rights and investigate corruption for years to come.
  • Scale of targeting: NPR documented over 100 individuals targeted by government powers, ranging from former presidents and attorneys general to celebrities and former national security officials.

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