Weaponization Working Group
The Weaponization Working Group is a working group of the Office of the Attorney General within the United States Department of Justice. HistoryOn February 5, 2025, hours after being sworn in as attorney general, Pam Bondi signed a memorandum establishing the Weaponization Working Group to review "politicized" prosecutions.[1] The working group involved the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia, then led on an acting basis by Ed Martin, who praised the January 6 Capitol attack and repeated false claims of fraud in the 2020 presidential election.[2] In May 2025, amid pressure from Republicans in the Senate to withdraw Martin's nomination for United States attorney for the District of Columbia, president Donald Trump announced that Martin would serve as director of the Weaponization Working Group.[3] Martin outlined a strategy to shame individuals that cannot be charged with crimes at a press conference days later.[4] OrganizationThe Weaponization Working Group is led by Ed Martin.[3] In July, The New York Times reported that Jared Wise, a former Federal Bureau of Investigation agent who was charged with encouraging the January 6 Capitol attack, had become a counselor to Martin.[5] ResponsibilitiesProsecutions against TrumpPam Bondi's memorandum tasked the Weaponization Working Group with reviewing prosecutions against Donald Trump prior to his second inauguration, including the Smith special counsel investigation, his prosecution in New York, and the New York business fraud lawsuit against the Trump Organization.[1] Other prosecutionsBondi's memorandum ordered the working group to review potential "prosecutorial abuse" relating to criminal proceedings in the January 6 Capitol attack, anti-abortion protesters who obstructed access to facilities that perform abortions, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation's alleged targeting of Catholics.[1] According to NBC News, Bondi ordered charges against Michael Kirk Moore, a Utah doctor indicted for allegedly selling fraudulent COVID-19 vaccine cards, after his prosecution was reviewed by the Weaponization Working Group.[6] ResponsesThe establishment of the Weaponization Working Group marked a dramatic effort to utilize the United States federal government against perceived enemies of Donald Trump, according to The New York Times; Donald Voiret, the special agent who led the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Seattle field office and served as the bureau's attaché to London, criticized the working group as an attempt to politicize the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.[7] References
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