Updated
Updated · abcnews.com · Jun 3
DOJ's No. 3 Official Deletes Post Backing Alternate Payouts as $10 Billion Trump Deal Faces Scrutiny
Updated
Updated · abcnews.com · Jun 3

DOJ's No. 3 Official Deletes Post Backing Alternate Payouts as $10 Billion Trump Deal Faces Scrutiny

3 articles · Updated · abcnews.com · Jun 3

Summary

  • Stanley Woodward deleted a late-night X post after endorsing Sen. Lindsey Graham's idea that alleged Biden-era "weaponization" victims could seek compensation through the Federal Tort Claims Act.
  • The post appeared hours after acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told House lawmakers the Justice Department was permanently scrapping its planned "Anti-Weaponization Fund," though he declined to put that pledge in writing.
  • Democrats are likely to cite Woodward's message as evidence the administration may still be exploring another route to compensate Jan. 6 defendants despite Blanche's testimony.
  • The abandoned fund was part of a settlement under which Trump dropped a $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS and two civil claims tied to the Russia investigation and the 2022 Mar-a-Lago search.
  • Trump added to the confusion in a podcast interview taped Tuesday, saying he was not dropping the fund and that pardoned Jan. 6 participants should be reimbursed for a "crooked government."

Insights

With the DOJ's compensation fund gone, could a 1946 law become the new path for claims against the government?
A judge is questioning the legality of the settlement that created the fund. What could this mean for government deals?