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BumRushDaShow

(160,763 posts)
Wed Sep 24, 2025, 03:55 PM Wednesday

Judge finds misconduct by Trump's DOJ in Luigi Mangione case

Source: Raw Story

September 24, 2025 12:10PM ET


President Donald Trump's Justice Department is under fire by a federal judge after uncovering "multiple employees ... may have violated" local rules guaranteeing a right to a fair trial for so-called "healthcare shooter" Luigi Mangione. U.S. District Court Judge Margaret Garnett wrote on Wednesday that Mangione documented several incidents in which members of the Southern District of New York made public statements that are in violation of Criminal Rule 23.1.

The judge shredded the DOJ, saying that she issued an order on "April 25, 2025, specifically identifying the strictures of this rule for counsel and directing the prosecution team to ensure that the highest levels of the Department of Justice, up to and including Attorney General Bondi, were aware of and understood they were bound by this Rule."

"It is the duty of the lawyer or law firm, and of non-lawyer personnel employed by a lawyer's office or subject to a lawyer's supervision, ... not to release or authorize the release of ... opinion that reasonable person would expect to be disseminated by means of public communications in connection with pending ... criminal litigation with which they are associated, if there is a substantial likelihood that the dissemination will interfere with a fair trial or otherwise prejudice the due administration of justice," the judge wrote.

Brian Nieves, associate deputy attorney general, reposted a commentary from DOJ public affairs staffer Chad Gilmartin on X. The comment celebrated Attorney General Pam Bondi pursuing the death penalty for Mangione, wrote legal analyst Adam Klasfeld, who runs the "All Rise" Substack.

Read more: https://www.rawstory.com/luigi-mangione-2674029284/



Link to ORDER (PDF) - https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.640793/gov.uscourts.nysd.640793.53.0.pdf
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MarineCombatEngineer

(16,022 posts)
2. Wait, Been A Dick Donald's DoJ committed misconduct in the Luigi Mangione case?
Wed Sep 24, 2025, 04:00 PM
Wednesday

Color me stunned that such a fine upstanding agency, such as the DoJ would do such a thing.

Just in case this is needed:

Escurumbele

(3,911 posts)
8. I am sure the defense lawyers will go dfor that.
Wed Sep 24, 2025, 06:45 PM
Wednesday

I think Bondi, after this stunt, should be disbarred, what a corrupt person she is.

Takket

(23,254 posts)
5. can this sort of thing raise to the level of a dismissal?
Wed Sep 24, 2025, 06:00 PM
Wednesday

DOJ has been pretty aggressive to say the least in dismissing anyone with any integrity and replacing them with any bozo that will kiss drumpf's ass. I have been worried about what the incompetence will mean when we are confronted with REAL criminals that we need to put behind bars. well those fears could come to realization here and if this guy is set free because of Bondi and DOJ's incompetence and if that happens Democrats need to be screaming from the rooftops that a murderer was set free because of Bondi.

meow2u3

(25,212 posts)
6. That reads to me like the "Justice" Dept. wants Mangione convicted and condemned at any cost
Wed Sep 24, 2025, 06:24 PM
Wednesday

even if it means they have to trample on his Constitutional rights to a fair trial.

LetMyPeopleVote

(170,297 posts)
9. Deadline Legal Blog-Federal judge warns Trump DOJ of sanctions, contempt for rule violations in Mangione case
Thu Sep 25, 2025, 07:15 PM
Thursday

Trump officials have already broken the rules in a high-profile death penalty case. Will it matter?

Federal judge warns Trump DOJ of sanctions, contempt for rule violations in Mangione case - MSNBC apple.news/AzsnzTaNATSy...

(@oc88.bsky.social) 2025-09-25T17:10:10.462Z

https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/luigi-mangione-doj-contempt-sanctions-rcna233639

Is the Trump administration trying to mess up its prosecution of Luigi Mangione? How it responds to a federal judge’s new order will show its priorities.

The order came Wednesday in Mangione’s federal case (he has a state case, too), after his lawyers wrote to the judge to complain of what they said was illegal Justice Department conduct. U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett seemed to agree, writing that actions by high-ranking DOJ staff members “appear to be in direct violation” of a court rule and prior court order.

Mangione’s lawyers wrote to the Biden appointee Tuesday that the government “has continued to prejudice his right to a fair trial in a death penalty case.” They pointed to officials promoting on social media, in a since-deleted post, President Donald Trump’s statement in a Fox News interview that Mangione “shot someone in the back as clear as you’re looking at me . . . he shot him right in the middle of the back — instantly dead.”.....

In her order, the judge gave the DOJ until Oct. 3 to explain “how these violations occurred” and “what steps are being taken to ensure that no future violations occur.” She also warned that “future violations may result in sanctions, which could include personal financial penalties, contempt of court findings, or relief specific to the prosecution of this matter.”

It’s that last, vague phrase — “relief specific to the prosecution of this matter” — that suggests the DOJ’s actions could hurt the case itself. I use that flimsier wording like “suggest” and “could” because that’s the tenor of the order, which implies that no judicial discipline will be carried out against officials for violations the judge said have already occurred; but there may be some as-yet unspecified discipline for future violations.

Perhaps the judge is mindful that any consequence she imposes could be upended on appeal, as happened in a different case in August, when a Trump-appointed appellate panel majority tossed a judge’s probable cause order that raised the prospect of contempt proceedings against Trump officials.

To be sure, it might be annoying for the DOJ to have to come up with an explanation for why government officials violated a court rule and order. Beyond that, it’s unclear what, if any, consequence the government will suffer here. As ever, it seems that Trump officials will have to try to mess up the case — and even then, it remains unclear what consequence would come should officials keep breaking the rules.
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