Michael S. Schmidt and Alan Feuer:
A judge has thrown out two of their most high-profile indictments.
Grand juries have repeatedly refused to charge those they are targeting.
And now, in the wake of a lacerating ruling by a federal judge derailing an inquiry into the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome H. Powell, officials at the Justice Department have encountered an even more profound problem: Prosecutors are floundering in the most basic steps of criminal investigations into those President Trump wants scrutinized.
The latest setback in the president’s retribution campaign came on Friday when Judge James E. Boasberg of Federal District Court in Washington quashed grand jury subpoenas to the central bank for information about the renovations underway at its headquarters and Mr. Powell’s testimony to Congress about them.
The U.S. attorney overseeing the case, Mr. Trump’s longtime friend and ally Jeanine Pirro, has vowed to appeal the decision and cast Judge Boasberg, who has clashed with the Trump administration, as an activist. And an appeals court could ultimately overturn the decision.
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As a general rule, prosecutors are given great leeway in issuing grand jury subpoenas, a common tool in the early stages of investigations. Unlike search warrants, they do not require a finding of probable cause by a judge that there might be evidence a crime was committed.
But Judge Boasberg found that Ms. Pirro’s office did not even meet the extremely low threshold needed to send the subpoenas, ruling there was “essentially zero evidence to suspect Chair Powell of a crime.”
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Judge Boasberg explicitly acknowledged the reality of Mr. Trump’s revenge campaign, writing that the president had urged the Justice Department to investigate his adversaries and adding that the department’s prosecutors had listened. In and of itself, it was an extraordinary acknowledgment. Citing a Supreme Court case, he wrote that “judges ‘are not required to exhibit a naïveté from which ordinary citizens are free.’”
JUST IN: Trump unleashes two big rants against #SCOTUS & Boasberg, judge who blocked the Powell grand jury subpoena. Trump's deep-seated grudge against the justices is clear, particularly for not intervening in 2020 election pic.twitter.com/7d9rPknrmL
— Josh Gerstein (@joshgerstein) March 16, 2026