DOJ fires two senior Eastern District of Virginia prosecutors amid turmoil after Siebert ouster and Comey indictment
The Justice Department has fired two senior Eastern District of Virginia prosecutors, Maya Song and Michael Ben'Ary, days after U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert resigned under pressure from President Trump over his refusal to pursue charges against New York Attorney General Letitia James and shortly after Lindsey Halligan was installed as interim U.S. attorney and led high‑profile prosecutions including the Comey and James matters. Ben'Ary had been the lead prosecutor on an active terror case tied to the 2021 Abbey Gate attack; DOJ declined to comment on personnel moves while House Judiciary Democrats and a watchdog group have opened inquiries into the ouster and Halligan’s prosecutions.
📌 Key Facts
- Erik Siebert resigned as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia on Sept. 19, 2025 after President Trump publicly said he wanted Siebert “out”; Trump later said he had fired Siebert and withdrew his nomination.
- A months‑long DOJ probe into alleged paperwork discrepancies tied to New York Attorney General Letitia James’ Brooklyn townhouse and Virginia home had produced no charges or evidence sufficient for an indictment before recent leadership changes.
- President Trump nominated and installed Lindsey Halligan—who has no prior prosecutorial experience and previously worked on his post‑Mar‑a‑Lago legal team and in a White House role involving Smithsonian reviews—as interim U.S. attorney for EDVA; she was sworn in and is serving an interim term limited to 120 days unless extended or Senate‑confirmed.
- Following Siebert’s removal and Halligan’s installation, two senior EDVA prosecutors, Maya Song and Michael Ben’Ary, were terminated or removed from their posts; Ben’Ary had been lead prosecutor on an active terror case (Mohammad Sharifullah) with a trial scheduled later in 2025.
- Reporting from career EDVA prosecutors and the New York indictment timeline indicates career staff had previously concluded there was insufficient evidence in the James matter before leadership changes; later reporting says Halligan personally presented the Letitia James indictment to a grand jury.
- DOJ declined to discuss personnel matters publicly; Attorney General Pam Bondi and department spokespeople expressed support for Halligan, and Bondi has framed the changes as ending “weaponization” and said the department is considering a broad set of investigations.
- The personnel moves and broader leadership direction have intensified internal unease and attrition at DOJ in 2025 (including heavy departures from the Public Integrity Section and Civil Rights Division) and prompted congressional oversight: House Judiciary Democrats have launched a probe seeking communications and vetting records related to the EDVA changes.
- A watchdog group (Democracy Defenders Fund) asked the acting DOJ inspector general to investigate Halligan’s prosecutions of James Comey and Letitia James, alleging the indictments reflect a political vendetta; the request was signed by former White House ethics lawyers from multiple administrations.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"Politico’s Playbook frames Trump’s EDVA shake‑up and public calls for prosecutions as a coordinated ‘pressure campaign’ on DOJ, warning it blurs traditional boundaries between the White House and law enforcement to achieve political and legal aims."
📰 Sources (15)
- Democracy Defenders Fund sent a letter to Acting DOJ Inspector General William Blier requesting an investigation into EDVA Acting U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan’s prosecutions of James Comey and Letitia James.
- Signatories include former White House ethics lawyers Norm Eisen (Obama), Richard Painter (George W. Bush), and Virginia Canter.
- The letter alleges Halligan pursued indictments to fulfill President Trump’s ‘personal vendetta’ and was installed after the prior U.S. attorney resigned/was fired for not bringing charges.
- Confirms Lindsey Halligan, installed after the ouster of EDVA U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert, is driving high‑profile cases and personally presented the Letitia James indictment to a grand jury.
- Details that career EDVA prosecutors had found insufficient evidence in the James matter before leadership changes and that Trump publicly pressed for charges.
- Attorney General Pam Bondi is scheduled to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Oct. 7, 2025 at 9 a.m. ET.
- The hearing is framed as her first congressional appearance since the Justice Department secured an indictment of former FBI Director James Comey less than two weeks earlier.
- Bondi publicly repeated on Fox News that 'the weaponization has ended' and said 'everything is on the table' when describing investigations the department could pursue.
- Article reiterates internal DOJ personnel impacts (Public Integrity Section nearly emptied; more than 70% of Civil Rights Division attorneys have left) and ties them to recent personnel moves including the ouster of U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert and the appointment of Lindsey Halligan.
- Two senior prosecutors were terminated: Maya Song and Michael Ben'Ary.
- Michael Ben'Ary was lead prosecutor on the active Mohammad Sharifullah terror case tied to the 2021 Abbey Gate attack; Sharifullah's trial is scheduled later this year.
- Office staff had circulated a memo arguing charges against James Comey should not be brought; the firings occurred days after Erik Siebert was removed and Lindsey Halligan was installed as interim U.S. attorney.
- DOJ publicly declined to discuss personnel matters but issued supportive comments about Halligan and noted AG Pam Bondi's support.
- Sen. Kaine raised the recent resignations of two U.S. attorneys in Virginia—Todd Gilbert (Western District) and Eric Siebert (Eastern District)—linking them to presidential personnel choices and partisan pressure.
- Kaine characterized the nominees as having 'Republican bona fides' and suggested the pattern reflects broader politicization of U.S. attorney posts.
- Transcript shows Klobuchar (a Judiciary Committee member) raising the topic on air and linking recent U.S. Attorney personnel changes to broader concerns — adding a Democratic senator's direct, public perspective to the developing controversy.
- The interview text explicitly references the resignation of Erik Siebert and the swearing‑in of Lindsey Halligan, confirming that the issue is being discussed at senior Senate levels.
- House Judiciary Committee Democrats have launched a formal review and sent a letter to AG Pam Bondi seeking Siebert's performance evaluations and communications.
- The committee requested 'all communications between any official or employee at the Justice Department and any official or employee at the White House... regarding prosecution referrals' from Jan. 20, 2025 to present.
- Democrats also demanded records about Lindsey Halligan's selection and appointment, including vetting materials and any promises or commitments regarding prosecutions.
- NPR specifies Halligan was sworn in Monday and notes she has no prosecutorial experience.
- Adds that Halligan had been assisting President Trump in efforts to remove what he calls “improper ideology” from Smithsonian museums.
- Reiterates Siebert left under pressure after declining to bring criminal charges the president wanted against New York AG Letitia James.
- Reports broader DOJ attrition: thousands of employees have left in 2025, with nearly all of the Public Integrity Section gone and roughly three-quarters of Civil Rights Division attorneys departed (per source quoted).
- Quotes a former DOJ attorney alleging AG Pam Bondi’s Day 1 memo framed DOJ lawyers as the president’s lawyers, fueling internal unease.
- Lindsey Halligan has been sworn in and is serving as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.
- Under federal law, her interim term is limited to 120 days unless extended by the district court or she is Senate‑confirmed.
- Siebert resigned amid concerns he would be forced out over not prosecuting New York AG Letitia James; Trump publicly claimed he fired him.
- Background details on Halligan’s recent White House role include signing a letter initiating a Smithsonian review to align exhibits with administration directives.
- Halligan has never worked in a prosecutor’s office; she previously handled insurance claims and served on Trump’s defense team in the classified‑documents case.
- President Trump publicly announced he is nominating senior White House aide Lindsey Halligan to be U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.
- Trump posted an open letter pressuring Attorney General Pam Bondi to move quickly on investigations, later saying she is "doing a GREAT job."
- New Trump quote at the White House: "We have to act fast — one way or the other... If they're not guilty, that's fine. If they are guilty or if they should be charged, they should be charged."
- AP/NPR reporting notes DOJ’s months‑long mortgage‑fraud probe into New York AG Letitia James has shown no indication of incriminating evidence sufficient for an indictment to date.
- Details on the probe’s origin: alleged paperwork discrepancies tied to James’ Brooklyn townhouse and a Virginia home; James’ lawyers deny wrongdoing and call the probe political.
- Background on Halligan: part of Trump’s legal team during the early Mar‑a‑Lago classified documents investigation; more recently involved in a White House effort to remove "improper ideology" from Smithsonian properties.
- Context added that the FBI investigated former FBI Director James Comey over an Instagram post; he was interviewed by the Secret Service and removed the post after concerns over interpretation.
- President Trump has now formally nominated Lindsey Halligan to be U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.
- Trump’s Truth Social post calls Halligan “tough, smart, and loyal,” and says she will work with AG Pam Bondi and DAG Todd Blanche.
- Halligan’s background includes serving as one of Trump’s attorneys post–Mar‑a‑Lago search and a recent White House role focused on Smithsonian content.
- Mary “Maggie” Cleary told EDVA staff in a Saturday email (obtained by CBS) that she has been named acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia.
- Cleary replaces Erik Siebert, who resigned amid Trump administration pressure to bring mortgage‑fraud charges against New York Attorney General Letitia James; Trump publicly claimed he fired Siebert.
- Cleary’s background: senior counsel in DOJ’s Criminal Division; former federal prosecutor in the Western District of Virginia; prior roles under Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and AG Jason Miyares.
- Cleary authored a Spectator World piece describing being falsely identified as present at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 while she was a federal prosecutor; she said she was placed on leave, interviewed, and later cleared.
- Her email to staff said, “While this appointment was unexpected, I am humbled to be joining your ranks,” and referenced EDVA’s “distinguished legacy.”
- CBS reports DOJ’s months‑long probe of James has not produced charges and there’s no indication prosecutors have found evidence sufficient for an indictment.
- AP reports Siebert confirmed his resignation in an internal email to colleagues; AP reviewed the email.
- DOJ spokespeople declined to comment on the resignation.
- It is not immediately clear who will replace Siebert as U.S. attorney.
- AP details that the probe focused on paperwork discrepancies tied to Letitia James’ Brooklyn townhouse and a Virginia home.
- Trump’s on‑record Oval Office remark: “It looks to me like she’s really guilty of something, but I really don’t know.”
- AP notes ABC News was first to report the pressure on prosecutors and the planned ouster.
- Siebert had been nominated by Trump earlier this year before his resignation.
- President Trump publicly claimed he did not accept Erik Siebert’s resignation but instead fired him and withdrew his nomination.
- Trump said he acted after learning Siebert had "UNUSUALLY STRONG" support from Virginia’s Democratic senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine.
- Axios reiterates that Siebert did not bring mortgage‑fraud charges against New York AG Letitia James and declined to prosecute James Comey based on allegations referred by DNI Tulsi Gabbard.
- Siebert resigned Sept. 19, 2025, following Trump’s public remark that he wanted Siebert 'out.'
- The DOJ investigation into alleged paperwork discrepancies tied to Letitia James’ properties has produced no charges to date.
- Top deputy Maya Song will leave the first assistant role to work as a line prosecutor; DOJ declined comment on leadership changes.