President Donald Trump wants his former personal attorney Todd Blanche, now deputy attorney general, to approve handing him $230 million in taxpayer funds as damages for past DOJ investigations.

Trump has filed administrative complaints with the Department of Justice alleging that his rights were violated by DOJ investigations into his illegal retention of classified documents and the role Russia played in the 2016 election. The $230 million in damages he is seeking would need to first be approved by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and Civil Division head Stanley Woodward Jr. before likely needing Trump’s ultimate approval. Blanche previously served as Trump’s personal attorney during these investigations, while Woodward served as counsel for Trump aide Walt Nauta in the classified documents case. The conflict of interest is so obvious that even Trump has commented on it.

“I have a lawsuit that was doing very well, and when I became president, I said, ‘I’m sort of suing myself,’” Trump said in the Oval Office on Oct. 15. “I don’t know, how do you settle the lawsuit? I’ll say, ‘Give me X dollars, right?’ And I don’t know what to do with the lawsuit. It’s a great lawsuit. And now I won, it sort of looks bad, I’m suing myself, right?”

Raskin and Garcia agree that it looks bad.

“If either of your claims had any merit, you could have taken them to court by now and litigated them publicly. You did not do that,” their letter states. “Instead, you waited until you became President and installed your handpicked loyalists at DOJ, knowing that you could instruct them to co-sign your demand notes in secret behind closed doors, and then you could present the notes to the U.S. Treasury for cold hard cash courtesy of the American taxpayer. That isn’t justice, it is theft.”

The letter goes on to demand the White House hand over a litany of information about Trump’s “ongoing conspiracy” to raid the U.S. Treasury for his own benefit. This includes all relevant correspondence with DOJ officials, including Blanche, all DOJ memoranda or other legal opinions related to the case and all materials identifying who at DOJ is involved in overseeing Trump’s pursuit of damages.

While Democrats are currently in the minority in the House, the letter from Raskin and Garcia indicates their intent to investigate this matter both now and to use the congressional subpoena power if Democrats win control in the 2026 elections.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Welcome to facenotee👍🏿

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading