
WASHINGTON — A longtime federal prosecutor resigned Tuesday rather than carry out what she described as orders from Trump-appointed officials to take actions unsupported by evidence, according to a copy of her resignation letter obtained by NBC News. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Denise Cheung, who had been at the Justice Department for over 24 years and was the head of the criminal division of the U.S.
Main Idea: Veteran federal prosecutor Denise Cheung resigned after saying Trump appointees pushed her to take a bank freeze action without enough evidence.
Key Points:
The resignation suggests possible political pressure in federal law enforcement, which can weaken public trust and make taxpayers worry that cases are driven by power, not evidence.
No clear positive impact identified.
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Veteran federal prosecutor whose resignation letter and refusal to issue the bank-freeze letter are the centerpiece of the.
Acting deputy attorney general identified as heading the office that provided the disputed instructions.
Central federal agency in the resignation dispute and the source of the contested directive.
Interim U.S. attorney named as the official who pressed for the freeze letter and then asked for Cheung’s.
Specific FBI office that evaluated the evidence, drafted the freeze letter, and sent the bank notice.
Its Washington Field Office played a direct role in reviewing and sending the freeze letter.
The office where Cheung served and from which the resignation was submitted.
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Sign in to commentMentioned because the article frames Martin as Trump-appointed, giving Trump indirect relevance.
Mentioned as part of the broader Justice Department turmoil and recent resignation context.
Included only because Mayor Eric Adams is identified with the city in the broader DOJ context.
Referenced as the former president whose administration is tied to the grant award under review.