DOJ wants to shield its lawyers from outside scrutiny. Critics worry about oversight
Source: NPR
April 25, 2026 5:00 AM ET
The Justice Department wants to oversee the discipline of its attorneys even as government lawyers face more questions from judges and watchdogs about their conduct. A DOJ rule that would allow the attorney general to step in and potentially delay state bar investigations into federal prosecutors has sparked a flurry of comments from attorneys general around the country, as well as from former prosecutors, legal ethics experts and judges.
Critics say allowing the department to delay or sideline state investigations weakens one of the last independent checks on government lawyers.
Michael Frisch, ethics counsel at the Georgetown University Law Center, sees this move "as part of a broad attack on the rule of law and
on the concept that lawyers should be ethically accountable for their actions. I think there's a great concern that these attempts to avoid accountability will de-legitimize the processes that have traditionally regulated lawyers.". Additionally, he said, it violates a 1998 federal law called the McDade-Murtha Amendment. That means any rule once finalized could be subject to legal challenge.
Under the current system, federal prosecutors can be subject to investigations by state bar associations, which license and discipline all attorneys. The proposed change would give the attorney general power to request a first review of complaints filed against current or former federal prosecutors for their actions while working for the agency.
Read more: https://www.npr.org/2026/04/25/g-s1-118356/justice-department-ethics-rules-state-bar
hedda_foil
(16,999 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(180,895 posts)Many of the experienced DOJ attorneys have left or been fired and the ones left are not necessarily the brightest. Bondi has had to hire some real idiots to pursue trump's demands.
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https://www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/justice-department-attorneys-state-bar-investigations-newrule/
Posted in the Federal Register Wednesday, the proposed regulation seeks to suspend any state ethics proceedings against current or former DOJ attorneys if the department decides to conduct its own review first.
If finalized after a 30-day public comment period, the proposed regulation would in theory allow the DOJ to head off any state bar investigation into a DOJ lawyer by opening and indefinitely stalling its own investigation into the attorney......
All U.S. attorneys, including those in the DOJ, must be licensed by a state bar association to practice law in the U.S. Such associations are responsible for investigating ethics complaints against the lawyers they license, and if necessary, taking disciplinary actions for misconduct, including suspending law licenses and permanent disbarment.
Subverting state bar authorities would give DOJ lawyers carte blanche to violate ethics rules, Barb McQuade, a University of Michigan law professor and a former U.S. attorney, said in a social media post Wednesday reacting to the proposed regulation.
The regulation and discipline of attorneys is a job for the Bar Association of each state. Lawyers are regulated and disciplined by their state bar association. trump is ordering the DOJ to pursue meritless acts of vengeance and the attorneys who pursue these actions need to be subject to state bar discipline
LetMyPeopleVote
(180,895 posts)The legal profession will be fighting back against trump
Bar organizationsâ statement in support of the rule of law
— Monica (@monwan.bsky.social) 2025-03-26T23:44:27.834Z
"We the undersigned bar organizations stand together with and in support of the American Bar Association to defend the rule of law and reject efforts to undermine the courts and the legal profession."
www.americanbar.org/news/abanews...
Link to tweet
https://www.americanbar.org/news/abanews/aba-news-archives/2025/03/bar-organizations-statement-in-support-of-rule-of-law/
Bar organizations statement in support of the rule of law
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CHICAGO, March 26, 2025 We the undersigned bar organizations stand together with and in support of the American Bar Association to defend the rule of law and reject efforts to undermine the courts and the legal profession.
In particular, as outlined by the ABA:
We endorse the sentiments expressed by the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court in his 2024 Year End Report on the Federal Judiciary, [w]ithin the past year we have also seen the need for state and federal bar associations to come to the defense of a federal district judge whose decisions in a high-profile case prompted an elected official to call for her impeachment. Attempts to intimidate judges for their rulings in cases are inappropriate and should be vigorously opposed.
We support the right of people to advance their interests in courts of law when they have been wronged. We reject the notion that the U.S. government can punish lawyers and law firms who represent certain clients or punish judges who rule certain ways. We cannot accept government actions that seek to twist the scales of justice in this manner.
We reject efforts to undermine the courts and the profession. We will not stay silent in the face of efforts to remake the legal profession into something that rewards those who agree with the government and punishes those who do not. Words and actions matter. And the intimidating words and actions we have heard and seen must end. They are designed to cow our countrys judges, our countrys courts and our legal profession.
There are clear choices facing our profession. We can choose to remain silent and allow these acts to continue or we can stand for the rule of law and the values we hold dear. We call upon the entire profession, including lawyers in private practice from Main Street to Wall Street, as well as those in corporations and who serve in elected positions, to speak out against intimidation.
If lawyers do not speak, who will speak for our judges? Who will protect our bedrock of justice? If we do not speak now, when will we speak? Now is the time. That is why we stand together with the ABA in support of the rule of law.
American Bar Association
Alameda County (California) Bar Association
Alexandria (Virginia) Bar Association
Allegheny County Bar Association (Pennsylvania)
American Immigration Lawyers Association
Appellate Lawyers Association
Arab American Bar Association of Illinois
Association of Professional Responsibility Lawyers
Bar Association of Erie County (New York)
Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis
Bar Association of San Francisco
Berks County (Pennsylvania) Bar Association
Boston Bar Association
Boulder County (Colorado) Bar Association
Chicago Bar Association
Chicago Council of Lawyers
Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association
Columbus (Ohio) Bar Association
Connecticut Bar Association
Contra Costa (California) County Bar Association
Detroit Bar Association and Foundation
Erie County (Pennsylvania) Bar Association
First Judicial District Bar Association (Colorado)
Hawaii Women Lawyers
Hennepin County (Minnesota) Bar Association
Hispanic National Bar Association
Hudson County (New Jersey) Bar Association
Illinois State Bar Association
International Society of Barristers
Kansas Bar Association
Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Association
Kansas City Metropolitan Bar Foundation
Lawyers Club of San Diego
Long Beach (California) Bar Association
Los Angeles County Bar Association
Louisville Bar Association
Maine State Bar Association
Maricopa County Bar Association
Massachusetts Bar Association
Massachusetts LGBTQ Bar Association
Middlesex County (New Jersey) Bar Association
Milwaukee Bar Association
Minnesota State Bar Association
Monroe County (New York) Bar Association
Muslim Bar Association of Chicago
Nassau County (New York) Bar Association
National Arab American Bar Association
National Arab American Bar Association - Michigan Chapter
National Asian Pacific American Bar Association
National Association of Women Lawyers
National Conference of Bar Presidents
National Filipino American Lawyers Association
National LGBTQ+ Bar Association
National Native American Bar Association
New Jersey Women Lawyers Association
New Mexico Black Lawyers Association
New York City Bar Association
New York County Lawyers Association
North County (California) Bar Association
Board of Governors of the Oregon State Bar
Palestinian American Bar Association
Passaic County (New Jersey) Bar Association
Philadelphia Bar Association
Queens County (New York) Bar Association
Ramsey County (Minnesota) Bar Association
San Diego County Bar Association
San Fernando Valley (California) Bar Association
Santa Clara County Bar Association (California)
South Asian Bar Association of North America
State Bar of New Mexico
Nassau County (New York) Bar Association
National Arab American Bar Association
National Arab American Bar Association - Michigan Chapter
National Asian Pacific American Bar Association
National Association of Women Lawyers
National Conference of Bar Presidents
National Filipino American Lawyers Association
National LGBTQ+ Bar Association
National Native American Bar Association
New Jersey Women Lawyers Association
New Mexico Black Lawyers Association
New York City Bar Association
New York County Lawyers Association
North County (California) Bar Association
Board of Governors of the Oregon State Bar
Palestinian American Bar Association
Passaic County (New Jersey) Bar Association
Philadelphia Bar Association
Queens County (New York) Bar Association
Ramsey County (Minnesota) Bar Association
San Diego County Bar Association
San Fernando Valley (California) Bar Association
Santa Clara County Bar Association (California)
South Asian Bar Association of North America
State Bar of New Mexico