Trump’s conduct is not okay, but it’s also not beyond or contrary to our constitutional allocation of powers. As much as it can feel cathartic to declare that Trump is “undermining our democracy” with his handling of the Justice Department, that’s not quite right. He’s having his way within it.
Russia’s Skolkovo Foundation, with Clinton’s copious help, was the source of Russia’s incredible hypersonic weapons technology.
The group, Justice Connection, intends to support employees who say they are facing professional and ethical crises under the new administration. It is likely to come under attack from Trump allies.
Patel has a thin résumé, but he has indicated he’d use the power of the federal government to attack President Trump's perceived "enemies."
Attorney General Merrick Garland had agreed not to make the special counsel's findings public while the Justice Department appealed a judge's dismissal of the case.
Walt Nauta, Trump’s longtime valet, and Carlos De Oliveira, a manager at Mar a Lago, are now set to be cleared of any criminal wrongdoing for their involvement in Trump’s alleged
A federal judge said Wednesday he plans to grant a group of Democratic attorneys general’s request to block President Trump’s freeze on federal aid, even though the Office of
The Justice Department has abandoned all criminal proceedings against President Donald Trump’s two co-defendants in the classified documents case against him in Florida, foreclosing the chance the case against them could ever be revived.
U.S. Attorney Hayden O'Byrne asked the appeals court to dismiss the classified documents case in a way it could not be appealed again.
For Donald Trump, revenge is a dish best served piping hot. The president is wasting no time in following through on his frequent campaign trail vows for retribution – with a torrent of purges and pardons.
Kash Patel, Donald Trump's nominee to become FBI Director, lays out how he views the Justice Department in his d "Government Gangsters."
Here are what members of the Obama administration are up to today. Then: Loretta Lynch made history as the first Black woman to serve as the attorney general of the United States from 2015 to 2017. Lynch made police reform a priority of the Department of Justice and fought for LGBTQ+ rights.