logo
Trump swears in ex-Fox News star who once bugged her hubby's ‘Love Boat' as top DC prosecutor

Trump swears in ex-Fox News star who once bugged her hubby's ‘Love Boat' as top DC prosecutor

Independent6 days ago

Nearly 20 years after she last had a job as a working prosecutor, former Fox News personality Jeanine Pirro is officially on board and running all criminal prosecutions, local and federal, in the nation's capital.
Pirro, who until last month was a co-host of Fox's The Five panel program and previously hosted her own weekend show, took the oath of office on Wednesday in an Oval Office ceremony attended by President Donald Trump.
The swearing-in formalized her appointment as Interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, a position that had been held by Trump ally and GOP activist Ed Martin until it became clear that he lacked the support needed to be confirmed to the role on a permanent basis.
Unlike Martin, whose nomination was doomed by Republican senators' concerns over his lack of experience and prior representation of January 6 rioters as a defense attorney, Pirro has experience as a working prosecutor and as a judge hearing cases in criminal court.
She worked as an assistant district attorney in New York's Westchester County from 1975 to 1990, when she was elected to a county judge position as a Republican. Three years later, she sought and won election as the Westchester County District Attorney, a position she would hold for more than a decade by winning subsequent elections in 1997 and 2001.
But Pirro's political fortunes took a dramatic turn just before she left the District Attorney's office at the end of 2005. In August of that year, she announced that she would seek the Republican nomination in New York's 2006 Senate race against then-senator Hillary Clinton.
After an awkward announcement speech during which she froze after misplacing a full page of her speech, she failed to gain enough support to convince party elders of her viability. She withdrew from the senate primary and instead ran unopposed for the GOP nomination as New York's Attorney General, facing off against Andrew Cuomo, the son of former governor Mario Cuomo who had served in the Clinton administration as Housing and Urban Development Secretary.
Pirro's campaign was dogged by a tabloid-ready scandal arising out of a federal criminal probe into her push to have a boat belonging to her then-husband, Al Pirro, bugged as a way of finding out of he was cheating on her.
According to the New York Post, federal prosecutors working for then-U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia investigated 'allegations recently brought to our attention by other law-enforcement agencies' alongside the FBI and Pirro's former office in Westchester. She could have faced illegal wiretapping charges that carried a five-year prison sentence.
Pirro was caught up in a separate probe of ex-New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik. Investigators who were monitoring Kerik's phone calls heard her urging the ex-commissioner to order workers at his private security company to place listening devices on her boat.
When he said his employees were reluctant to do so, she told Kerik: 'I'll put the f**king thing on myself.'
Pirro maintained that no illegal taping had ever taken place, but she went on to lose that election to Cuomo by double digits.
Two years later, she returned to the judge's bench — sort of — as the host of an eponymous weekday courtroom program on the CW television network called Judge Jeanine Pirro. In 2009, the show's second season earned her a Daytime Emmy Award, but by 2011 it was canceled due to poor ratings.
Pirro wasn't off television for long, however. Her legal background and Republican bona fides earned her a place on Fox News, where her Justice with Judge Jeanine weekend show premiered in January 2011.
For the next eleven years, Pirro offered incendiary commentary that was often heavy on bombast but short on facts, landing her and her employer in one controversy after another.
One March 2019 episode of her show was spiked after she was suspended by Fox for making offensive comments about Minnesota congresswoman Ilhan Omar in which she suggested that Omar, a practicing Muslim who wears a head covering, wasn't fully loyal to the United States. At the time, her suspension led President Donald Trump to speak up on her behalf.
Writing on what was then known as Twitter, Trump wrote: 'Bring back @JudgeJeanine Pirro. Stop working soooo hard on being politically correct, which will only bring you down, and continue to fight for our Country.'
Her show resumed at the end of March 2019, but a year later she ran smack into another controversy while broadcasting from home during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic.
It was March 2020, and Pirro missed the first 15 minutes of the program. When she did appear, she was disheveled and was speaking in a slurred manner leading some observers to suggest she was drunk on the air.
At the time, a Fox spokesperson claimed her less than polished speech was due to a non-functioning teleprompter rather than intoxication, but that didn't stop the perception of drunkenness from becoming part and parcel of Pirro's image in popular culture.
She was frequently parodied on NBC's Saturday Night Live by Cecily Strong, whose portrayal of Pirro always included a glass full of what appeared to be red wine.
Regardless of whether she was sober or not, Pirro remained a staunch defender of Trump to the point where she was one of the fiercest advocates of his false stolen election claims after he lost the 2020 presidential race to Joe Biden. That support was rewarded when Trump, at her request, pardoned her ex-husband on tax evasion charges shortly before leaving office after his first term.
Pirro was among the Fox personalities named in a February 2021 defamation suit from voting machine maker Smartmatic, which she and others had accused along with Dominion Voting Systems, of making machines that were designed to help Democrats rig elections.
In the wake of the lawsuits, Fox pulled her show off the air and reassigned her to be a co-host on The Five.
The network settled a similar suit from Dominion for $787 million in 2023. Smartmatic's litigation against Fox is still ongoing.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts
Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Education Secretary Linda McMahon struggles with basic math when trying to add up proposed budget cuts

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon was given a math lesson during a Senate hearing on Tuesday when Senator Jack Reed pointed out that $1.5 multiplied by 10 is not 'over a trillion dollars' but actually $15 billion. Sitting before the appropriations subcommittee that focuses on education, McMahon nodded her head along as Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana mistakenly claimed that the U.S. spends '$1,580,000' on federal grant programs, known as TRIO and GEAR UP, per year and that after 10 years, that adds up to be 'over a trillion dollars.' The U.S. actually spends $1.58 billion per year on the programs, which does not add up to more than a trillion after 10 years. But, McMahon did not correct Kennedy's math error. However, Reed, the senator from Rhode Island, did. 'I'm not a great mathematician, but I think you were talking about a trillion dollars? I believe $1.5 billion times 10 is $15 billion, that's a little bit off from a trillion dollars,' Reed said. McMahon responded, 'I think the budget cuts $1.2 billion for TRIO.' 'Well, $1.2 billion that would be $12 billion, not a trillion dollars,' Reed replied. 'Ok,' McMahon said. The math blunder was part of McMahon's testimony about President Donald Trump's 2026 budget proposal, which includes sweeping cuts to the Department of Education – drastically impacting education grants such as TRIO or GEAR UP. The Independent has asked the Department of Education for comment. TRIO, a federal program comprised of various grants, are some of the Education Department 's largest investments aimed at assisting low-income or first-generation college students or individuals with disabilities to advance through the academic pipeline. In 2024, the Education Department provided $1.191 billion for the program. GEAR UP, a federal grant program, assists low-income students preparing to enter postsecondary education. In 2024, the Education Department provided $388 million for the program. But under Trump's proposed 'skinny budget,' essentially all of the TRIO and GEAR UP grants would be eliminated. It's part of his efforts to shutter the Education Department. During the hearing, Senator Susan Collins of Maine aired concerns about the cuts to TRIO, saying she had 'seen the lives of countless first-generation and low-income students, not only in Maine, but across the country… changed by the TRIO program.'

Sabrina Carpenter takes savage swipe at ex Barry Keoghan as she announces new single
Sabrina Carpenter takes savage swipe at ex Barry Keoghan as she announces new single

The Sun

time12 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Sabrina Carpenter takes savage swipe at ex Barry Keoghan as she announces new single

SABRINA Carpenter has made a not-so-thinly veiled jab at her ex Barry Keoghan with the announcement of her new single. The Taste singer, who is known for her playful and sexual lyrics and stage show, teased her new single yesterday with a cheeky clip of her hitch-hiking in bum-exposing shorts. 6 6 6 Now she's revealed the name of the song – and made it known it was about someone in particular. Taking to Instagram, she captioned the clip: 'this one's about you!! 'Manchild' is out this Thursday 6/5 8pm EST♥️ special 7' vinyl available now'.' A teaser of the vinyl also revealed the words: 'Inside of your head when you've just won an argument with a man.' While Sabrina didn't explicitly say it was about Irish actor Barry Keoghan – who is set to play Ringo Starr in the upcoming four-part Beatles biopic film series – fans wasted no time in believing it was about the pair, considering their split last year. Sabrina and Barry were first connected in September 2023, making their first public appearance together at Grammys after-party in February 2024. They later attended the MET Gala together, with Barry being seen on the side of the stage throughout some of Sabrina's performances. The actor, who shot to fame in Saltburn and Banshees of Inisherin, later had a starring role in her music video for Please Please Please, which depicts the story of a woman deciding to ignore warnings for a potential romance, but begging her love interest not to embarrass her. However, in August, The Sun on Sunday confirmed Barry had been dumped by Sabrina for the first time after she grew tired of his party lifestyle. A source said at the time: 'Barry acts like an idiot when he is drunk and Sabrina was getting increasingly frustrated. 'He has always been a party animal and Sabrina was fed up with his antics. She is soaring in the charts and is putting herself first as she gears up for her tour next month.' Romantic dinners, racy shoutouts and sexy video cameos - a timeline of Sabrina Carpenter & Barry Keoghan's relationship While they later reconnected, they officially ended for good in December. It was believed that a combined pressure of her skyrocketing fame and tour schedule, plus his workload and party lifestyle, ultimately made the relationship unviable. A source told People: "They are both young and career-focused, so they've decided to take a break." 6 6 6

Where's Marty McFly's guitar? Search is on for 'Back to the Future' prop 4 decades later
Where's Marty McFly's guitar? Search is on for 'Back to the Future' prop 4 decades later

The Independent

time16 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Where's Marty McFly's guitar? Search is on for 'Back to the Future' prop 4 decades later

Marty McFly grabbed a guitar in 'Back to the Future' and rocked out with the band at a 1950s high school dance, helping him narrowly avoid blinking out of existence before time-traveling back to the 1980s. The guitar, in real life, wasn't as lucky. Filmmakers went looking for the instrument while making the movie's 1989 sequel, but even now it's nowhere to be found. Four decades after the blockbuster film debuted, the guitar's creator has launched a search for the iconic Cherry Red Gibson ES-345. Gibson, which is based in Nashville, is asking the public for help tracking it down as the movie turns 40 and as the company produces a new documentary about the search and the film, 'Lost to the Future.' In a video by Gibson, with the movie's theme song playing in the background, 'Back to the Future' stars such as Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson and Harry Waters Jr. make a cinematic plea. There's also a surprise appearance by Huey Lewis, whose band Huey Lewis and the News performed the soundtrack's headliner song, 'The Power of Love.' Lloyd, in the cadence of Doc Brown, says in the video that the guitar has been 'lost to the future.' 'It's somewhere lost in the space-time continuum,' says Fox, who played McFly. 'Or it's in some Teamster's garage.' In the film, McFly steps in for an injured band member at the 1955 school dance with the theme 'Enchantment under the Sea,' playing the guitar as students slow dance to 'Earth Angel.' He then leads Marvin Barry and the Starlighters in a rendition of 'Johnny B. Goode,' calling it an oldie where he comes was from even though the 1958 song doesn't exist yet for his audience. Fox said he wanted McFly to riff through his favorite guitarists' signature styles — Jimi Hendrix behind the head, Pete Townshend's windmill and the Eddie Van Halen hammer. After digging and dancing to 'Johnny B. Goode,' the students at the dance fall into an awkward silence as McFly's riffs turn increasingly wild. 'I guess you guys aren't ready for that yet,' McFly says. 'But your kids are gonna love it.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store