The Justice Division on Friday refused to situation a signed declaration from appearing Legal professional Normal Todd Blanche verifying that it now not intends to pursue President Donald Trump’s “Anti-Weaponization Fund.”
The DOJ’s refusal comes after a federal decide final week gave the administration seven days to confirm in a declaration that it would not create the controversial fund.
“Such declarations are pointless and the compelled testimony of senior officers from the Government Department implicates severe separation of powers considerations,” the DOJ mentioned in a court docket submitting Friday to U.S. District Decide Leonie Brinkema, who final week issued an injunction indefinitely blocking the administration from creating the fund.
Brinkema had given the Trump administration seven days to confirm in a declaration from appearing Legal professional Normal Todd Blanche and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that it would not create the fund, which she mentioned would doubtless result in the dismissal of the lawsuit she was overseeing in opposition to the fund.
However of their submitting Friday, the division argued that Brinkema’s provide was a doubtlessly unconstitutional infringement of the chief department by successfully requiring “testimony” of prime officers on a matter that the administration has repeatedly mentioned wouldn’t be transferring ahead.
President Donald Trump speaks to the media upon arrival at Paris Orly airport, following the G7 Summit, in Orly, France, June 17, 2026.
Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
The fund, which was introduced final month by the DOJ to compensate those that allege they have been wrongly focused underneath the Biden administration, was proposed in alternate for Trump agreeing to drop his $10 billion lawsuit in opposition to the IRS in addition to two civil claims for $230 million associated to the Russia collusion investigation he confronted throughout his first time period in workplace and the 2022 search of his Mar-a-Lago property — sparking accusations of self-dealing and a bipartisan uproar over the potential use of taxpayer cash to pay rioters who attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
In her ruling final week, Decide Brinkema pointed repeatedly to President Trump’s personal shifting statements in latest weeks concerning the fund, together with his pointed assault on Brinkema herself after she had quickly paused the fund earlier this month, during which he referred to her as a “radical left decide.”
“When the president of the US says he is dissatisfied that one thing is just not going ahead,” Brinkema mentioned, that may solely add to the proof that the fund would possibly “rear its head” sooner or later.
