DOJ removes career federal prosecutor leading the Brennan investigation after she resisted bringing charges career staff judged unsupported
On April 17, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice removed Maria Medetis Long — the career federal prosecutor heading the national-security section at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Miami and leading the federal criminal investigation of former CIA Director John Brennan — after she resisted pressure from senior DOJ leadership to file charges career prosecutors had told the Department the evidence did not support. U.S. Attorney Jason Reding Quiñones had earlier told DOJ leadership that charges could still be months away. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, seeking to retain the job after President Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi earlier in April over dissatisfaction at the slow pace of cases against Trump's political adversaries, has been pressing to deliver indictments on the president's priority targets.
Actors
- U.S. Department of Justice
- Todd Blanche (Acting Attorney General)
The Brennan investigation is rooted in a long-running Trump grievance: the 2017 intelligence community assessment that found Russia had interfered in the 2016 presidential election to help Donald Trump. Prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida had been working the matter for months, with the office's National Security Section Chief, Maria Medetis Long, in charge. Career prosecutors and investigators on her team had repeatedly told Justice Department officials they did not believe the evidence supported a quick indictment, and U.S. Attorney Jason Reding Quiñones had earlier told DOJ leadership that charges could still be months away.
On April 17, 2026, CNN reported that DOJ had removed Long from the
investigation after she resisted pressure from senior DOJ leadership
to file charges on a timeline top officials deemed unacceptable.
The decision came as Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, having
taken the role after President Trump fired Attorney General Pam
Bondi earlier in April over dissatisfaction at the slow pace of
cases against Trump's political adversaries, was working to
satisfy the president's prosecution demands. The next-day appointment
that filled the vacancy with a Trump legal ally — Joseph diGenova as
Counselor to the Attorney General assigned to the Brennan probe at
Fort Pierce — is recorded separately at
issue-256-federal-weaponizing-doj per the one-issue-per-event
rule (different date, different specific act).
The discrete abuse documented here is the use of Justice Department
personnel power to remove a career national-security prosecutor
specifically because she had resisted pressure to bring criminal
charges career staff judged unsupported by the evidence on a
politically-targeted investigation. The primary abuse mapped is
weaponizing-doj; selective-prosecution follows because the
underlying objective being served — speeding charges career
prosecutors did not believe were supported, against a specific
political adversary of the president — is the configuration
selective-prosecution describes.
Sources
- Exclusive: Justice Department removes lead prosecutor from probe of Trump critic John Brennan — CNN primary accessed May 26, 2026
See also
- DOJ indicts Southern Poverty Law Center on 11 counts of fraud over $3M informant payments
- Judge dismisses DOJ human-smuggling case against Abrego Garcia as vindictive prosecution
- DOJ in Puerto Rico halted drugs-for-votes election-fraud probe after Trump win
- DOJ installs Trump legal ally Joe diGenova as Counselor to the Attorney General assigned to the Brennan probe in Fort Pierce
- DOJ refers 384 naturalized Americans for denaturalization in record-volume push