Letters from an American - February 14, 2025
Episode Date: February 15, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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February 14th, 2025. On this day, I always like to tell the story of Theodore Roosevelt's terrible
1884 Valentine's Day and how it led to the progressive era. But things are happening
too fast these days to leave a gap in the record. so you'll have to look back at last year, or forward to next, for that story.
For this year, here goes.
The administration's order to drop federal charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams
in exchange for his cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, has sparked
a crisis in the Trump administration's Department of Justice,
led by Trump's own appointees.
Yesterday, that crisis led to multiple resignations from the department as acting U.S. Attorney for
the Southern District of New York, Danielle Sassoon, resigned rather than drop the corruption
charges. When the acting Deputy Attorney General of the Department of Justice, Emil Boeve III, tried to do an end run around the Southern District of New
York by taking the case to the Public Integrity Section in the Criminal
Division of the Department of Justice in Washington DC and getting a lawyer there
to dismiss the case, at least five of them resigned as well. This crisis is
really over whether the Department of Justice
will defend the rule of law or declare loyalty to Trump alone. And the crisis is growing.
Boeve claims that administration officials did not make an arrangement with Adams to dismiss
charges in exchange for his political support. But this morning, Adams and Trump's border czar,
Tom Homan, undermined that assertion
when they appeared together on the Fox News Channel.
"'If he doesn't come through,' Homan said of Adams,
"'I'll be back in New York City
"'and we won't be sitting on the couch.
"'I'll be in his office, up his butt,
"'saying, where the hell is the agreement we came to?'
"'Today, Hagen Scotton, the
acting assistant US attorney for the Southern District of New York, resigned
in a blistering letter to Boeve calling his justification for dropping the
charges against Adams, transparently pretextual. No system of ordered liberty
can allow the government to use the carrot of dismissing charges or the stick of threatening to bring them again to induce an elected official to support its policy objectives," he wrote. clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts. He pointed out to Boeve that,
there is a tradition in public service of resigning in a last-ditch effort to head off a serious
mistake. Any assistant U.S. attorney would know that our laws and traditions do not allow using
the prosecutorial power to influence other citizens, much less elected officials, in this way.
He continued, if no lawyer within earshot of the president is willing to give him that
advice, then I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool or enough
of a coward to file your motion to dismiss the case.
But it was never going to be me.
Please consider this my
resignation. Also this morning, legal analyst Barb McQuade reported that DOJ
leadership has put all public integrity section lawyers into a room with one
hour to decide who will dismiss Adams indictment or else all will be fired.
Sending them strength to stand by their oath
which is to support the Constitution, not the president's political agenda," she added.
According to Jeremy Robach, Shana Jacobs, Mark Berman, and Carol D. Lenning of the Washington
Post, one lawyer at the meeting said the discussion was gut-wrenching and not anything any of us expected to see in America.
At first they all agreed to resign together, but then Edward Sullivan, a career federal prosecutor
approaching retirement, said he would sign the motion to dismiss the case in a bid to save the
jobs of his colleagues. The crisis was reminiscent of the Saturday Night Massacre of October 20th, 1973, when President Richard Nixon ordered Attorney General
Elliot Richardson to fire Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox after Cox
subpoenaed a number of the tapes Nixon had recorded in the Oval Office
concerning the break-in to the Democratic National Committee's
headquarters in the Washington DC D.C. Watergate
complex.
Richardson and his deputy, William Ruckelschaus, refused to execute Nixon's order and resigned
in protest.
It was only the third man at the Justice Department, Solicitor General Robert Bork, who was willing
to carry out the order, firing Cox.
In that case, popular outrage at the resignations and firing
forced Nixon to ask Bork, now acting attorney general, to appoint a new special
prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, a Democrat who had voted for Nixon on November 1st.
On November 17th, Nixon assured the American people, I am not a crook.
The administration's determination to impose its will on the United States
is behind its insistence that Trump can rename the Gulf of Mexico
and Alaska's Denali, the highest peak in North America,
by executive order.
In 2017, Trump pushed hard to make Americans accept
that the crowds at his inauguration
were bigger than those at President Barack Obama's, an immediately disprovable lie that
seemed unimportant at the time but was key to establishing the primacy of Trump's vision
over reality, an acceptance that led eventually to the big lie that Trump had won the 2020
presidential election, and now, apparently,
to the lie that Elon Musk is cutting waste and fraud from the government, when in fact
he appears simply to be cutting programs he and Trump dislike.
Although tech companies and various media outlets have accepted Trump's language,
the Associated Press has continued to use the internationally accepted historic name,
the Gulf of Mexico.
The Associated Press is a not-for-profit news cooperative founded in 1846
that produces and distributes news reports across the country and the world.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Taylor Butowich today claimed that the AP's use of Gulf of Mexico showed its commitment to
misinformation and announced that the AP would be barred from the Oval Office and Air Force One.
In the Senate, Alaska Senators Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan, both Republicans, are pushing
back on Trump's name change for Denali, sponsoring a bill to require the mountain
to be designated Denali on maps, documents,
and any official U.S. records.
Senate Armed Services Chair Roger Wicker,
a Republican of Mississippi,
pushed back today on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's
rookie mistake on Wednesday when he offered
that the U.S. would not support Ukraine's membership
in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or NATO, and that it was unrealistic for Ukraine
to demand a return to its borders before Russia invaded in 2014, essentially offering to let
Russia keep Crimea.
Wicker said he was puzzled and disturbed by Hegseth's comments and added, I don't know who wrote
the speech. It is the kind of thing Tucker Carlson would have written and Carlson is
a fool. Joe Gould and Jamie Detmer of Politico identified Carlson as a pro-Putin broadcaster.
There are good guys and bad guys in this war and the Russians are the bad guys,
Wicker said. They invaded, contrary to almost every international law, and they
should be defeated. And Ukraine is entitled to the promises that the world
made to it. Hackers pushed back today on Elon Musk's Department of Government
Efficiency website, launched earlier this week after Musk claimed that the group was posting its actions on the Department of Government Efficiency website launched earlier this week after Musk claimed that the group was posting its actions on the Department of Government Efficiency website.
At the time, the website was essentially blank.
Jason Kobler of 404 Media reported that the website was built out on Wednesday and Thursday.
It appears not to be on government servers, is not secure, and pulls information from an open database that anyone could edit.
Coders promptly added, this is a joke of a.gov site, and these experts left their database open.
One coder told Kobler that the website feels like it was completely slapped together.
Tons of errors and details leaked in the page source code.
Indeed, Jennifer Bendery of HuffPost
pointed out that one of the errors on the page
is that it appears to have posted classified information
about the size and staff of a US intelligence agency.
Security clearance lawyer Bradley Moss posted,
if you're a clearance holder,
stay away from the Department of Government Efficiency site.
These ignorant virgins are going to find themselves prosecuted for
violating the Espionage Act before all is said and done.
Protesters today packed Christopher Park in New York City's Greenwich Village
near the Stonewall National Monument after the Trump administration erased TQ Plus
from the LBGTQ Plus on the monument's website.
The Stonewall uprising of 1969,
six days of conflict between police and LGBTQ Plus protesters
after police raided the Stonewall Inn,
brought the longstanding efforts of LGBTQ Plus activists for civil rights to popular attention, making Stonewall a
symbol of LGBTQ plus rights. Trans activists Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia
Rivera were key figures in the Stonewall uprising. Acknowledging their
contribution, one protester held a sign that read, National Park Service, you can't spell history without a T.
Former Republican operative Stuart Stevens had a different take.
He posted,
When I see the sexual orientation hate coming out of the Republican Party
under the pretext of just being anti-trans,
I am very tempted to name the Republican operatives
and elected officials who are closeted gays.
It's not a short list.
["Dead of Massachusetts"]
Letters from an American was produced
at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts,
recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.