Anonymous ID: 2966ab Dec. 3, 2024, 7:46 p.m. No.22103350   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22103330

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“The clear intent is to scare career staffers out, but you know career prosecutors are tough, and agents are tough,” said a senior Justice Department official. “So good luck with that.”

 

Still, more Justice Department employees than usual appear to be exploring jobs outside the government.

 

Mary McCord is the Planner and Traitor with Norm Eisen, of 2020 steal she needs immediately arrested cause and prosecuted

Mary McCord, a former Justice officialwho runs the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection (ICAP) at Georgetown University, said she’s received many calls from agency lawyers interested in openings at ICAP. She said Justice Department employees may be asked to help Trump carry out aspects of his agenda that could be legally questionable, including pledges of mass deportations, prosecuting political enemies and deploying the military domestically.

 

“All of the worst things that Trump has said he would do will require the Justice Department,” said McCord, who served as acting assistant attorney general for national security during the Obama administration and the beginning of the Trump administration. “People are afraid they will be asked to do things that they can’t do.”

 

Legal recruiter Sarah Van Steenburg said she is hearing from more Justice Department employees at the onset of this Trump administration than she did during the first one.

 

“The difference is this time is we’re hearing from rank-and-file civil servants who thought they would retire in the government,” said Steenburg, a recruiter at the firm Major, Lindsey & Africa. “A lot were there during the first Trump administration. They’re trying to prognosticate what the next administration would look like and what the market is looking for.”

 

A second Trump presidency

There have been a few out-loud references to the big changes that could be afoot. At a charity event in Washington in mid-November, Natalie Bara, president of the FBI Agents Association, alluded to the possibility that Trump could fire FBI Director Christopher A. Wray before his 10-year term is complete.

 

“Boss, by my count, you have three years left in your term,” Bara said as she introduced Wray. The hundreds of current and former FBI employees in attendance cheered in support of their director.

 

While there was constant controversy at the top ranks of the Justice Department during Trump’s first administration, much of the department — including the criminal division, antitrust division and most of the U.S. attorney’s offices — ran fairly typically, with qualified people running big sections.

 

The civil rights and environmental divisions usually experiencethe sharpest shift in priorities between Republican and Democratic administrations, and people interviewed said they expect that change to be even more drastic when Trump takes office than it has been in the past. (Sadistic unit that go after 75 year old women praying at abortion clinics, and put them in jail)

 

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