Trump pardons undermine fight against public corruption

President Trump has pardoned at least 15 former elected officials and co-conspirators convicted of corruption offenses since returning to office. The moves coincide with deep cuts to the Justice Department's Public Integrity Section.

President Trump granted full pardons to individuals like former Las Vegas councilwoman Michele Fiore, who was convicted of misusing donations meant for a police memorial. She was pardoned weeks before her scheduled sentencing in May 2025. Other recipients include a Virginia sheriff convicted of accepting bribes and the former speaker of the Tennessee state house involved in a kickback scheme.

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Illustration depicting Donald Trump filing massive lawsuits against the U.S. government in a courtroom, with symbols of conflict-of-interest concerns.
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Trump pursues large claims and lawsuits against U.S. government, raising conflict-of-interest concerns

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President Donald Trump and his business entities have pursued legal claims and lawsuits seeking hundreds of millions to billions of dollars from the U.S. government over past federal investigations and the leak of his tax information, moves that critics and ethics specialists say create unusually direct conflicts of interest for an administration that would help oversee any response or settlement.

The Trump administration has brought new indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and the Southern Poverty Law Center as part of what critics describe as a revenge campaign against political enemies. These charges follow previous efforts targeting figures like New York Attorney General Letitia James. Prosecutors have used broad federal statutes and grand jury powers in these cases.

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Colin McDonald, President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead a newly proposed Justice Department unit focused on fraud in federally funded programs, told senators he would pursue cases “without fear or favor” as Democrats questioned whether the initiative could blur lines between the White House and prosecutorial decision-making.

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