Take Retirement Easy
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Latest News
  • Editor’s Pick
Enter Your Information Below To Receive Free Trading Ideas, Latest News And Articles.

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!
    Popular Topics
    • Lupin Modification Trial Validates Manufacturing Scale Up
    • Jill Biden’s ‘work husband’ runs for cover as privilege protection crumbles
    • NevGold Releases Some of the Highest Grade Oxide Gold-Antimony Results To Date: 9.68 g/t AuEq Over 11.6 MetersWithin 2.85 g/t AuEq Over 60.3 Metersat the Limousine Butte Project, Nevada
    • Drilling of N.T. Copper-Gold Targets Set to Begin
    • Maiden Underground Ore Reserves Underpins FY26 Production
    • About us
    • Contacts
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Email Whitelisting
    Take Retirement Easy
    • Investing
    • Stock
    • Latest News
    • Editor’s Pick
    • Latest News

    Judicial nominee shuts down ‘wildly inaccurate’ claims that he’s Trump’s ‘henchman’

    • June 25, 2025

    Emil Bove forcefully rejected criticisms that he was President Donald Trump’s ‘henchman’ or ‘enforcer’ during a Senate hearing Wednesday focused on his nomination by Trump to serve as a federal judge.

    Bove, a top Department of Justice (DOJ) official vying to fill a lifetime role on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, said media reports painted a ‘wildly inaccurate caricature’ about him.

    ‘I am not anybody’s henchman. I’m not an enforcer,’ Bove said, referring to descriptors used in headlines about him. ‘I’m a lawyer from a small town who never expected to be in an arena like this.’

    Bove served as a key attorney on Trump’s personal defense team during the president’s four criminal prosecutions. Prior to that, he led drug trafficking and terrorism cases during his decade as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York.

    But Bove’s formidable demeanor and controversial decisions upon joining DOJ leadership, which included dismissing New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ corruption charges and warning of personnel action for FBI employees who worked on Jan. 6 cases, have caused his nomination to the powerful appellate court bench to attract heightened scrutiny.

    Capping off a string of reports examining these controversies was a whistleblower claim leveled Tuesday, one day prior to Bove’s nomination hearing.

    The whistleblower, Erez Reuveni, a 15-year veteran of the department who was fired this year for perceived insubordination, alleged that Bove warned during an internal meeting that DOJ attorneys might need to say ‘f*** you’ to judges and defy any adverse orders they issue regarding one of Trump’s most provocative maneuvers to deport alleged illegal immigrants.

    Senate Democrats, who have widely objected to Bove’s nomination, grilled the nominee over the claim, noting that flouting court orders was unconstitutional and disqualifying. Bove said he has never advised anyone to defy judges’ orders.

    ‘Did you or did you not make those comments during that meeting?’ Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., pressed.

    ‘I did not suggest that there would be any need to consider ignoring court orders. At the point at that meeting there were no court orders to discuss,’ Bove said. 

    Schiff repeated the profane phrase several times, asking if Bove said it in relation to the courts.

    ‘I don’t recall,’ Bove said.

    ‘You just don’t remember that,’ Schiff replied incredulously.

    Other Democrats pressed Bove on the Adams saga, which had led in February to a handful of high-level DOJ employees resigning in protest of Bove’s order that they dismiss the mayor’s federal corruption charges. A judge ultimately dropped Adams’s charges at Bove’s request, but not before excoriating the DOJ for giving ‘inconsistent’ justifications for wanting to drop the case.

    Bove was accused by the ousted lawyers of asking the courts to toss out Adams’s charges in exchange for the mayor’s cooperation with the Trump administration’s immigration policy. Bove denied the allegation when pressed on it.

    ‘The suggestion that there was some kind of quid pro quo was just plain false,’ Bove said.

    Despite Democrats’ concerns, as well as concerns voiced by some defense lawyers who said they have had negative experiences with the nominee, Bove has some loyal supporters. No Republican senators have voiced opposition to him at this stage, a sign that he could eventually be confirmed, albeit narrowly.

    In an interview prior to the hearing, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Bove’s longtime friend and colleague, told Fox News Digital that Bove was a ‘freaking brilliant lawyer.’

    Blanche said reports that Bove was unqualified were ‘distorted’ and that installing him on the Third Circuit was a ‘no-brainer.’


    This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
    Related Topics
    • Featured

    Previous Article
    • Investing

    Hawthorn Announces Closing of C$4 Million Subscription Receipt Financing

    • June 25, 2025
    View Post
    Next Article
    • Stock

    Find Highest Probability Counter-Trend Setups

    • June 26, 2025
    View Post
    Enter Your Information Below To Receive Trading Ideas and Latest News

      Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!
      Popular Topics
      • Lupin Modification Trial Validates Manufacturing Scale Up
      • Jill Biden’s ‘work husband’ runs for cover as privilege protection crumbles
      • NevGold Releases Some of the Highest Grade Oxide Gold-Antimony Results To Date: 9.68 g/t AuEq Over 11.6 MetersWithin 2.85 g/t AuEq Over 60.3 Metersat the Limousine Butte Project, Nevada
      • About us
      • Contacts
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Email Whitelisting

      Input your search keywords and press Enter.