Trump DOJ Appoints Former Trump Lawyer to Prosecute CIA Director Brennan
"DiGenova is a former US Attorney and vocal ally of President Trump. He's staunchly supported the president with his public commentary for years. He's provided legal services in support of the president's causes. He joined the president's team of lawyers dealing with the Mueller special counsel investigation. He advocates for the president's pet conspiracy theories. He's publicly pronounced director Director Brennan guilty of participation in a grand conspiracy, calling Brennan evil, for short, branding him a traitor."
About this episode
Michael Popok reports on former CIA Director John Brennan's preemptive lawsuit against the Trump administration, filed July 1st as a 46-page complaint in federal court. Brennan is suing Donald Trump, Attorney General Todd Blanche, and special prosecutor Joe DiGenova to preserve evidence ahead of an expected criminal indictment related to his 2023 congressional testimony about Russian election interference and the Steele dossier. The lawsuit alleges vindictive prosecution and accuses the Trump administration of routinely destroying documents and using disappearing messaging apps like Signal. The case centers on claims that Brennan lied about the intelligence community's use of the Steele dossier in assessing Russian interference in the 2016 election. DiGenova, an 80-year-old former Reagan-era US attorney who previously served as Trump's criminal defense lawyer during the Mueller investigation, was appointed special prosecutor after the original Miami prosecutor told DOJ leadership the case was weak and was subsequently fired or transferred. The investigation is being conducted through a grand jury in Fort Pierce, Florida under Judge Aileen Cannon's jurisdiction, despite the alleged crime occurring in Washington DC, prompting allegations of deliberate judge-shopping. Popok notes that over 200 subpoenas have been issued, with prosecutors promising an indictment by year's end before the five-year statute of limitations expires in 2028. Brennan's strategy of suing first rather than waiting for indictment follows a precedent set by Kilmer Abrego Garcia, who successfully had his indictment dismissed for prosecutorial abuse. The complaint extensively documents Trump administration officials publicly calling Brennan a traitor and declaring him guilty before any charges, bolstering the vindictive prosecution claim.
Key takeaways
- John Brennan filed a 46-page lawsuit against Trump, Blanche, and DiGenova seeking court orders to preserve evidence before his anticipated indictment for alleged perjury about Russian election interference.
- Special prosecutor Joe DiGenova, Trump's former criminal defense lawyer, was appointed after the original prosecutor said the case was weak and was subsequently fired or transferred to oblivion.
- DiGenova has publicly called Brennan a traitor and evil on Fox News and Newsmax, declaring the conspiracy begins and ends with Brennan, creating apparent conflict of interest.
- The criminal investigation is being run from Fort Pierce, Florida under Judge Aileen Cannon despite the alleged crime occurring in Washington DC during 2023 congressional testimony.
- Brennan's lawyers sent a letter to Chief Judge Altonaga challenging the venue as deliberate judge-shopping to ensure Cannon, who may be auditioning for Supreme Court, presides over the case.
- The grand jury has issued over 200 subpoenas with prosecutors promising an indictment by year's end before the 2028 statute of limitations expires on the 2023 testimony.
- Brennan's preemptive lawsuit strategy follows Kilmer Abrego Garcia's successful dismissal for prosecutorial abuse, establishing precedent for vindictive prosecution claims against this DOJ.