Joseph DiGenova, a conservative attorney who previously represented President Trump's campaign when it challenged the results of the 2020 election, is being tapped by the U.S. Justice Department to lead an ongoing criminal investigation into former CIA Director John Brennan, a Justice Department official said on Saturday. DiGenova, who will oversee the probe from the Southern District of Florida, is joining the team just days after Maria Medetis Long was removed from the case, CBS News previously reported.
Main Idea: The Justice Department has tapped lawyer Joseph DiGenova to oversee its criminal probe of former CIA Director John Brennan, raising new concerns about political influence in the case.
Key Points:
The Justice Department’s choice of a Trump ally to oversee a case can weaken public trust in fair law enforcement and raise fears of political influence.
No clear positive impact identified.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Former CIA director who is the subject of the criminal investigation described in the article.
Central figure tapped by the Justice Department to oversee the Brennan probe and the article focuses on his.
Central government body assigning DiGenova to lead the investigation and changing personnel on the case.
Acting attorney general whose office and counselor role are part of the personnel change in the probe.
Republican-led committee that made the referral triggering the Brennan investigation.
Career federal prosecutor removed from the Brennan case, a key personnel change in the story.
The federal prosecutorial office from which DiGenova will oversee the probe.
Comments here are the same thread shown when this article appears in The Pulse.
No comments on this article yet.
Sign in to commentThe intelligence agency at the center of the underlying Brennan allegations, but not the article’s main actor.
Mentioned in DiGenova’s past comments and related litigation, but not a central focus of this article.
Referenced as the special counsel tied to a law clerk involved in the case, but only as background.
Named as the House Judiciary Committee chairman behind the referral that sparked the probe.
Mentioned as the judge connected to a former clerk now involved in the probe, but only in passing.