Doj shoots prosecutors who worked on January 6th as Trump’s cleansing continues

The White House has fired several Top FBI Employees and Federal Prosecutors Working on January 6, according to Reports on Friday when President Donald Trump continues to dramatically set up the federal government to adapt to his agenda.

Quotes Trump’s celebrating pardon For January 6th said a letter that fired several federal prosecutors was the reason for their dismissal, NBC News reported. One of the fired prosecutors, a former assistant American lawyer who handled some of the January 6 criminal cases, told Politico That 25 to 30 of his colleagues were fired and others were moved to different offices.

At the FBI, all six of the agency’s top leaders and several field office managers have been rejected, according to current and former FBI officials who spoke with NBC News. Play Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove – who represented Trump in several of his criminal cases – has asked for a list of FBI employees who worked on January 6 to “a review process to determine if additional staff actions are needed”, acting FBI director Brian J. Driscoll Jr. told employees in a memo Friday.

When asked about the dismissals, Trump said he hadn’t heard of them but added that it was “a good thing” that some FBI agents were fired “because they were very bad.”

“They were very corrupt people, very corrupt, and they injured our country very badly with weapons,” he said.

The sudden layoffs continue a series of radical staff changes in the federal government that have Alarmed career officials and Legal experts. Monday, Ministry of Justice fired several officials who worked on the criminal investigations Into Trump’s alleged erroneous treatment of classified documents and his efforts to overthrow the election results by 2020.

Last week, the administration also rejected more than a dozen inspectors in general across multiple federal agencies, one step, as a senior official in the White House characterized to NBC news as “Cleaning house of what doesn’t work for us and forward.” The President of the Council of Inspectors on Integrity and Efficiency, said Hannibal “Mike” Ware, In a letter to the White House That the group “does not believe that the actions taken are legally sufficient.”