The head of a key U.S. Justice Department task force that
combats drugs and organized crime was fired on Friday, amid a move by President
Donald Trump's administration to purge or sideline career officials.
Adam Cohen, who was director of the Organized Crime Drug
Enforcement Task Forces, in a social media post said he had been fired by
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump's former criminal defense attorney
who was confirmed to the department's No. 2 role by the U.S. Senate on
Wednesday.
Cohen's firing came just 18 hours after Blanche released a
memo that Cohen had helped him draft which announced that the task force he led
would be playing a new leading role in combating illegal immigration, as part
of an initiative dubbed "Operation Take Back America."
"It was a shock," Cohen wrote of his firing on
LinkedIn, noting he had been meeting regularly with leadership to discuss
violent crime initiatives.
"Putting bad guys in jail was as apolitical as it
gets," he wrote. "My personal politics were never relevant. Not until
yesterday."
Cohen's firing is one of the latest examples of the Trump
administration removing or sidelining career Justice Department officials, who
typically keep their positions across presidential administrations.
Also on Friday, three assistant U.S. attorneys in the
Southern District of New York, including two who were involved in prosecuting
the corruption case against New York Mayor Eric Adams, were placed on
administrative leave, according to an internal email by acting U.S. Attorney
Matthew Podolsky that was seen by Reuters.
The three attorneys' removal comes after eight Justice
Department attorneys in Washington and New York resigned in protest after
refusing to file a motion to dismiss the corruption charges against Adams.
The email identified the prosecutors involved in Adams' case
as Celia Cohen and Andrew Rohrbach.
"We were given no notice, nor asked for our views on
this decision, with which I disagree," Podolsky wrote.
"On that case and others, Celia and Andrew did the
right thing, for the right reasons, in the right way - every single day."
The third, Alex Kristofcak, who works on civil litigation,
was also placed on leave in response to comments he made on social media, the
email said.
In those comments, Kristofcak criticized Washington, D.C.'s
interim U.S. attorney, Ed Martin, after he warned Georgetown University Law
School that he would not hire its students unless the school removed diversity,
equity and inclusion from its curriculum.
"This is a grotesque abuse of power," Kristofcak
wrote of Martin.
"I am so sorry for my colleagues in DC who have this
thug of a boss."
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Southern
District of New York declined to comment.
Other career department officials were also fired Friday,
including pardon attorney Liz Oyer and Bobak Talebian, who oversaw the handling
of Freedom of Information Act requests.
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