Chicago prosecutor reviews over 1,000 cases after misconduct

U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros announced a sweeping review of more than 1,000 grand jury presentations in the Northern District of Illinois following revelations of prosecutorial misconduct.

The review stems from the dismissal of charges in the Broadview Six case, which involved protesters arrested last fall outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois. U.S. District Judge April Perry unsealed grand jury transcripts that showed improper conduct by prosecutors.

Boutros, speaking in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, said the examination covers cases dating back to 2007 and includes all pending matters. He described the effort as a massive and comprehensive review already underway to restore confidence in the grand jury process.

Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Sheri Mecklenburg, who handled some of the cases, was fired by Sen. Dick Durbin after the transcripts revealed she vouched for evidence and dismissed dissenting grand jurors. Ten defendants across three cases have had charges dropped so far.

Boutros has introduced new reforms with clear guidelines on turning over grand jury material. Legal analyst Irv Miller noted the office is working to rebuild trust with judges following the issues.

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Steve Descano testifying at a congressional hearing on immigration consequences in plea decisions.
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Fairfax County prosecutor grilled at House hearing over policy that weighs immigration consequences in plea decisions

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Fairfax County Commonwealth’s Attorney Steve Descano testified on May 14, 2026, before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement, facing sharp questioning from Republicans — including Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan — about a long-standing office policy that instructs prosecutors to consider certain immigration consequences when making some charging and plea decisions.

Almost two months after unveiling a proposed rule on March 5 to let the attorney general review ethics complaints against DOJ attorneys before state bar action, the Justice Department faces intensifying debate. With Pam Bondi out as attorney general and Todd Blanche acting in the role, officials cite rising politically motivated filings—citing cases involving Bondi, Ed Martin and Drew Ensign—while critics decry it as undermining state oversight and the McDade-Murtha Amendment.

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A federal judge has issued a public caution to an assistant U.S. attorney after a special counsel investigation found he failed to disclose key information in the Bryan Rafael Gomez immigration case. The ruling follows an earlier DOJ apology and a controversial DHS press release that inaccurately portrayed the judge's knowledge.

Hearings at the main immigration courthouse in San Francisco ended on May 1, months earlier than initially expected, affecting more than 100,000 pending cases. Most are being shifted to the Concord Immigration Court, while thousands of others will continue at a smaller San Francisco location on Sansome Street.

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