The Justice Department rebuffed a US judge’s invitation for top officials to submit a signed statement under oath that a $1.8 billion fund for what the administration described as victims of political “weaponization” will not happen.
In a filing on Friday, the Justice Department said that such declarations were “unnecessary” and that compelling statements from high-level officials “implicates serious separation of powers concerns.” A department lawyer wrote that Acting Attorney General
US District Judge
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Brinkema had said that if the government did not submit the confirmation that she believed was necessary, she would set a full schedule for next steps in the legal fight.
“The judge’s demand for declarations was an attempt to require her to personally sign-off on any and all future settlements, separate from this non-existent Fund, that the department may make,” the Department of Justice said in a statement.
The Virginia judge separately entered an order blocking action on the fund while the litigation is pending, finding that a group of challengers made a strong enough showing at an early phase of the case that the plan was likely unlawful. Democrats and other critics have denounced the proposal as a “slush fund” for President
Skye Perryman, president of Democracy Forward, which represents the fund challengers in the lawsuit, said in a statement that it was “telling” that Blanche and other top officials “continue to refuse to say under oath the Slush Fund is dead and won’t operate in the future.”
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The fund was part of a settlement to resolve Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit seeking to hold the
Separately, a federal judge in Florida who presided over the IRS case is
The case is Floyd v. Department of Justice, 26-cv-01399, US District Court, Eastern District of Virginia (Alexandria).
(Adds comments from the Department of Justice in fifth paragraph.)
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