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But of course
In a series of unprecedented actions, President Donald Trump and his deputies have scaled back or eliminated the government’s tools to ferret out and prosecute corruption, including efforts by foreign actors to interfere in American politics, experts and former officials say.
The administration’s actions, which come after years of mostly bipartisan support for an anti-corruption agenda, have shocked former prosecutors and anti-corruption advocacy groups. They say the administration’s approach threatens to open the floodgates to a surge in corruption in the United States and beyond.
“In his first weeks in office, Donald Trump has taken unprecedented action to invite corruption in the federal government and to undermine the guardrails meant to protect against it,” said a former federal corruption prosecutor, Noah Bookbinder, president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a nonprofit organization that says it works to expose corruption by government officials. “This is beyond troubling — it is an emergency,” he added.
In an Oval Office appearance, he signed a full pardon for Rod Blagojevich, the Democratic former governor of Illinois who was convicted of soliciting bribes to sell the Senate seat Barack Obama left when he became president. Blagojevich, who once appeared on Trump’s show “The Celebrity Apprentice,” has become a Trump supporter and is being considered for an appointment as U.S. ambassador to Serbia, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The same day, the Justice Department instructed Danielle Sassoon, then the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, to drop corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams. Adams is a Democrat, and the charges were brought during the Biden administration, but he has been moving toward Trump on issues like immigration in what had been seen as an attempt to secure a presidential pardon.
The administration previously made other moves that place a lower priority on corruption cases and scaled back the grounds to launch prosecutions. The Justice Department said it will limit the enforcement of a law designed to expose secret lobbying by foreign governments, the Foreign Agents Registration Act. It also disbanded a Justice Department unit that prosecuted large-scale corruption by foreign governments or their allies who use the U.S. financial system to launder their stolen gains. The efforts, including the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, have resulted in the seizure of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Coinciding with the shift on anti-corruption cases, the Trump administration has sought to undermine or ignore government offices Congress created in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal in the 1970s to check abuse and corruption inside federal agencies. Trump has fired 18 inspectors general, who probe possible fraud and abuse across the government. He dismissed the head of the Office of Government Ethics, which reviews possible financial conflicts of interest for high-level officials, as well as the head of the Office of Special Counsel, which is supposed to protect federal government whistleblowers from retaliation. Those moves are being challenged in court.
In a series of unprecedented actions, President Donald Trump and his deputies have scaled back or eliminated the government’s tools to ferret out and prosecute corruption, including efforts by foreign actors to interfere in American politics, experts and former officials say.
The administration’s actions, which come after years of mostly bipartisan support for an anti-corruption agenda, have shocked former prosecutors and anti-corruption advocacy groups. They say the administration’s approach threatens to open the floodgates to a surge in corruption in the United States and beyond.
“In his first weeks in office, Donald Trump has taken unprecedented action to invite corruption in the federal government and to undermine the guardrails meant to protect against it,” said a former federal corruption prosecutor, Noah Bookbinder, president of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a nonprofit organization that says it works to expose corruption by government officials. “This is beyond troubling — it is an emergency,” he added.
In an Oval Office appearance, he signed a full pardon for Rod Blagojevich, the Democratic former governor of Illinois who was convicted of soliciting bribes to sell the Senate seat Barack Obama left when he became president. Blagojevich, who once appeared on Trump’s show “The Celebrity Apprentice,” has become a Trump supporter and is being considered for an appointment as U.S. ambassador to Serbia, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The same day, the Justice Department instructed Danielle Sassoon, then the acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, to drop corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams. Adams is a Democrat, and the charges were brought during the Biden administration, but he has been moving toward Trump on issues like immigration in what had been seen as an attempt to secure a presidential pardon.
The administration previously made other moves that place a lower priority on corruption cases and scaled back the grounds to launch prosecutions. The Justice Department said it will limit the enforcement of a law designed to expose secret lobbying by foreign governments, the Foreign Agents Registration Act. It also disbanded a Justice Department unit that prosecuted large-scale corruption by foreign governments or their allies who use the U.S. financial system to launder their stolen gains. The efforts, including the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative, have resulted in the seizure of hundreds of millions of dollars.
Coinciding with the shift on anti-corruption cases, the Trump administration has sought to undermine or ignore government offices Congress created in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal in the 1970s to check abuse and corruption inside federal agencies. Trump has fired 18 inspectors general, who probe possible fraud and abuse across the government. He dismissed the head of the Office of Government Ethics, which reviews possible financial conflicts of interest for high-level officials, as well as the head of the Office of Special Counsel, which is supposed to protect federal government whistleblowers from retaliation. Those moves are being challenged in court.