
Trump administration fires justice department lawyers who investigated him
US President Donald Trump's administration has fired more than a dozen justice department lawyers who worked on two criminal cases against him.They were fired after Acting Attorney General James McHenry concluded they could not "be trusted to faithfully implement the president's agenda because of their significant role in prosecuting the president", a department official told the BBC's US partner CBS News.The lawyers were part of former special counsel Jack Smith's team which investigated Trump's alleged mishandling of classified documents and his alleged attempt to overturn his 2020 election defeat.The firings on Monday are effective immediately.
Mr Smith was appointed as special counsel in 2022 to oversee the two justice department cases into Trump. The president had vowed to fire him "within two seconds" of taking office, but he quit before his inauguration.Both cases resulted in criminal charges against Trump, who pleaded not guilty.But the cases were closed following his November election win. Prosecutors wrote that justice department regulations do not allow the prosecution of a sitting president.It was not immediately clear which members of Mr Smith's team were fired. Many of those who worked on Mr Smith's teams were career corruption and national security prosecutors who had worked across various administrations and were appointed to the cases.They reportedly received a letter on Monday which said their role in investigating and prosecuting the president made them unsuitable to work in the department."Firing prosecutors because of cases they were assigned to work on is just unacceptable," former US Attorney Joyce Vance told NBC News. "It's anti-rule of law; it's anti-democracy."The firings follow a major reassignment of some of the justice department's top officials with expertise in a wide range of fields including national security and public corruption. On Monday, one of them, the chief of the public integrity section, reportedly resigned.Trump and his team have accused the justice department of pursuing politically motivated cases against him, his associates and Republicans. Trump vowed an immediate overhaul of the department, which he says has been "weaponised" against him, while campaigning for re-election. His nominee to lead the justice department, Pam Bondi, has echoed Trump's view that federal prosecutions against him were political persecution, saying the department "had been weaponised for years and years and years".Mr Smith has publicly defended his work. In a letter accompanying the final draft of his report into Trump's actions after the 2020 election, he wrote: "The claim from [Trump] that my decisions as a prosecutor were influenced or directed by the Biden administration or other political actors is, in a word, laughable."Also on Monday, Washington DC's top federal prosecutor announced the launch of an internal review into the charging decisions behind hundreds of Capitol riot cases, according to CBS.Acting US Attorney Edward Martin, a Trump appointee, ordered prosecutors in his office to turn in documents, emails and other information related to the previous administration's decision to bring an obstruction charge against more than 200 Capitol attack defendants.

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Scottish Sun
9 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Israel v Iran LIVE: Tehran in chaos after blitz with gridlocked roads & ‘car bombs' as Trump says US may ‘get involved'
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Metro
15 minutes ago
- Metro
True story behind BBC crime drama that sent fans 'down a rabbit hole'
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The title card says the season is 'inspired by some of the theories around what happened to the other half'. That's not to say everything here has been conjured up from thin air. Several of the key players are still based on real life figures. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video It's that blend of fact and invention that has prompted several BBC viewers to seek out the truth of what happened after the robbery. @fordazzling wrote on X: 'Just finished binge watching series 2 and now cannot sleep as I'm down a Brink's-Mat rabbit hole of 'where are they now?' #TheGold.' So here's what we know… In short, yes-ish. The Brink's-Mat heist itself is a stone cold fact. Six armed men broke into the Brink's-Mat security depot, hoping for a sweet £1 million payday, but instead took home a bounty of gold bullion worth £26m. It was described as 'the crime of the century' and essentially rewrote the rules of international money laundering, leading to a boom in development around the London Docklands. Yet The Gold freely admits it doesn't know the full truth of what happened after the high-stakes theft itself, so the show is a combination of real events and theories on where the loot might have ended up. As for the characters, some are real, some are invented and some are a fun mismash of several different real people. John Palmer really did set up a timeshare business in the Canary Islands. But Charlie Miller (Sam Spruell) who made off with the second half of the gold isn't a real historical figure in the Brink's-Mat tale. Instead, he's a composite character, made up of various south London villains, as is his frenemy money laundering whizz Douglas Baxter (Joshua McGuire). Spruell described it in an interview as being 'not based on real, but based on an amalgam of real', telling the Radio Times: 'Neil [Forsyth]'s research has been extensive, as with all his projects and he has found his dramatic characters in the research. 'Partly it draws on real-life events, or real-life people, but in the end, it's his imagination that shapes the final product.' After extensive research, the show's writer Neil Forsyth has said that his biggest challenge in shaping that story was deciding what to keep from the story – with certain elements on the cutting room floor as a result. He told BBC Radio Scotland: 'It was such a fun story to research. It was more about piecing it together and it was really quite exciting. 'There's some great breakthroughs in the research. You think, 'well, I'll have that'. And it's exciting to think, 'I don't think anyone knows about this'.' He continued: 'The other interesting thing was, we did so much research on this that Brian Boyce, who Hugh Bonneville plays, who's the real life detective in charge of investigation – I'm at a stage now where sometimes I'll tell him things about the case that he didn't know, and that's always a bit of a thrill.' Heading up the Brink's-Mat team was Brian Boyce, played by Hugh Bonneville. The Downton Abbey star managed to get to know the real-life police detective to play him on screen. He told a Royal Television Society panel that if you cut Boyce in half, it would read 'police' and 'doing the right thing' all the way through him. 'He was incorruptible,' said Bonneville, 'which is why, at one stage in his career, MI5 suggested him for someone who wanted a certain investigation done because he, unlike certain others in the Metropolitan police and other police forces, had not been got at by money. 'He was absolutely a man of principle, and integrity.' Boyce is joined on the taskforce by Nicki Jennings (Charlotte Spencer), who is a fictional copper and Tony Brightwell (Emun Elliott) who is based on a real officer. Brightwell eventually left the police for the private sector, working for security firms such as Bishop Investigations and ISC Global. He's now in his 70s. Most of the gold has never been recovered. Uniting blue and white-collar criminals, the robbery was so far-reaching, the gang had to bring many others on board to figure out what to do with the loot. While the network of those involved is incredibly complicated, even more so with the so-called curse that left several of those involved killed, the gang was headed by Brian Robinson and Mickey McAvoy. Robinson was jailed for 25 years for his role in the robbery, as was McAvoy. More Trending Then in 1995, the High Court ordered McAvoy to make a payment of £27,488,299, making him responsible for the entire sum stolen, however by that point most of his share was apparently long gone. He was released from prison in 2000. A version of this article was first published in February 2023. View More » The Gold continues tonight at 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Outnumbered child star, 29, marries partner of seven years MORE: Beloved BBC series returning to TV as huge cast changes are confirmed MORE: Casualty star Michael Stevenson reveals worrying Iain Dean twist


Metro
30 minutes ago
- Metro
Three ways latest Middle East crisis could make life more expensive in the UK
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