Multiple federal prosecutors working out of the Department of Justice’s office in the Southern District of Florida (SDFL) are actively worried about violating the ethics of their profession if asked to indict one of President Donald Trump’s political enemies. That’s according to a Monday article by MSNBC’s Vaughn Hillyard and Laura Barrón-López, who reported that an unnamed source within SDFL is confiding that prosecutors are quitting their jobs rather than be asked to work on contentious cases. Two prosecutors recently quit after being asked to participate in a “conspiracy” investigation involving former intelligence and law enforcement officials, per MSNBC’s confidential source. U. S. Attorney Jason Reding Quiñones who Trump appointed to the post in March reportedly called a rare meeting of the major crimes unit, which includes several dozen attorneys, after the departures of the two prosecutors. The source told Hillyard and Barrón-López that “everyone is on pins and needles” about the prospect of being assigned to work on cases that Trump said should lead to the arrests of former President Barack Obama and former CIA Director John Brennan. One of the resignations was due to the prosecutor communicating that working on such an investigation was “something they could not take part in because it would violate their ethical responsibilities,” per the source. And neither of the two career prosecutors who resigned had worked on high-profile cases of that magnitude. The SDFL is reportedly also bypassing traditional protocol in how it issues subpoenas. When the DOJ issued approximately 30 subpoenas last week relating to the Trump-Russia investigation, many were signed by Executive Assistant U. S. Attorney Manolo Reboso. Reboso’s job as the third-most senior official in SDFL is usually limited to operations and human resources, rather than criminal investigations. MSNBC reported that typically, a career prosecutor will sign those subpoenas, meaning Reboso’s signature could be a sign of the SDFL having difficulty getting a rank-and-file prosecutor to sign their name. The outlet’s source referred to the subpoenas as “performative.”The latest resignations out of SDFL are part of a larger pattern of the DOJ bleeding out talent at all levels. The Washington Post reported Monday that the DOJ has lost more than 5, 500 staff since the start of Trump’s second term to a combination of resignations, firings and employees accepting buyout offers from the Trump administration. The DOJ is also having difficulty recruiting, as many top graduates of law schools no longer reportedly view the DOJ as an aspirational career destination. Click here to read MSNBC’s report in its entirety.
Category: politics
CAPAC calls out Defense Secretary Hegseth on religious restrictions relating to grooming – News India Times
Congresswomen Grace Meng, D-NY, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), who represents a diverse population in Queens, is calling on
Speaker Johnson says House will return to Washington for voting on shutdown deal
WASHINGTON — Speaker Mike Johnson said Monday that House lawmakers should start returning to Washington “right now” after a small group of Senate Democrats broke a 40-day stalemate late Sunday
Trump administration demands states ‘undo’ full SNAP payouts as states warn of ‘catastrophic impact’
If Trump attempts to claw back the money, “we will see him in court,” Governor Maura Healey said. The post Trump administration demands states ‘undo’ full SNAP payouts as states warn of ‘catastrophic impact’ appeared first on Boston. com.
Thune hopes to vote Sunday on proposal to reopen government
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S. D.) on Sunday said that if Democrats vote to advance a House-passed continuing resolution, he will offer as a substitute another stopgap spending measure with a later expiration date combined with three full-year appropriations bills, known as a minibus. Thune told reporters that the Senate will vote Sunday afternoon on a proposal to open the government, after not holding any votes Saturday afternoon. The text of the legislation is expected to be released early Sunday afternoon. It is expected to include the regular appropriations bills funding military construction, veterans affairs, the Department of Agriculture and.
New York, New Look? Elise Stefanik vs Kathy Hochul in 2026 – Liberty Nation News
Watch out, Kathy Hochul; there’s a new challenger in the race for New York governor. It didn’t come out of the blue – or, perhaps, out
Un-Duma-fication
Un-Duma-fication
How the Yuppies Became Socialists Fifty years ago, the professional managerial class swung right. Today, in America’s biggest cities, they’re voting for leftists like Zohran Mamdani. Here’s why.(7.01.25) — By River Page
Every morning, I ride the Metro-North into Grand Central station, walk through the main concourse, and see the constellations painted on the ceiling. It is the only place in New York City where you can see the stars. You can’t wish on them; you can’t follow them north or augur the future in their twinkling. There is no future in this city. You will own nothing, and you will not be happy. In New York you are on your own, and not even the heavens can help you. As you come and go to work the stars will remain in the same place, and so will you-or at least you hope. Because New York is a city for people who have everything and people who have nothing. For now you are neither, but the voice in your head says, Not for long, and repeats it every day, because you know things can always get worse-there is no middle without a bottom. One day the constellations on the ceiling will come crashing down with the plaster, and so will you, another middle-class star cast out of heaven. You are consumed by an angry terror. There is nothing more radicalizing than a fear of falling. At least, I suspect, for the people I walked among at a Zohran Mamdani watch party last Tuesday. Held at an upscale waterfront bar in upper Manhattan, the event was hosted by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), which was handing out a postcard-sized pamphlet titled “TRANS RIGHTS CLASS FIGHT,” which detailed the efforts of the DSA to pressure hospitals to facilitate gender transitions for children, among other efforts. I have read the pamphlet several times and am still not sure how “trans rights = class fight.” But I am sure which class I found myself in that night, as Andrew Cuomo conceded, and the young, fashionably dressed crowd cheered for their mayoral candidate, and the news reported that Mamdani had performed worst among the very poor and very rich, but won voters making between $75,000 and $150,000 per year. New York is a city for people who have everything and people who have nothing. I was among the young professional managerial class. When you hear about the laptop class-the people with AirPods, college degrees, and “good” jobs that require them to have three roommates in their thirties-this is them. They’re the most privileged class of workers ever produced by capitalism, and they want to end it. Voting for Mamdani won’t do that, but it at least shows you’re trying.
Johnson confident about redistricting fight despite California ballot measure win
The national redistricting battle continues after a decisive victory for California’s ballot measure to redraw the state’s congressional map in favor of five more Democrats in Congress.…
IWGB organizes protest outside Take-Two London offices against Rockstar layoffs
Despite Rockstar Games claiming the layoffs were due to leaking of confidential materials, IWGB maintains that union-busting was involved.







