Newsweek: Ex-Clarence Thomas clerk sounds alarm on expected Supreme Court move

A former clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas has issued a detailed warning about the Supreme Court‘s accelerating push to expand presidential power over federal agencies, coinciding with active cases that could overturn decades of precedent.

Caleb Nelson, a distinguished professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, published an analysis in September through NYU Law’s Democracy Project titled “Special Feature: Must Administrative Officers Serve at the President’s Pleasure?”, challenging the Court’s interpretation of presidential removal authority.

The alarm bells come as the Court prepares to hear arguments on whether President Donald Trump can fire officials at independent agencies without cause, with cases involving Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Federal Reserve officials already pending.

Newsweek reached out to the Supreme Court’s public information office via online form and the White House via email on Monday for comment.

Why It Matters

The Supreme Court’s trajectory on removal power could fundamentally restructure American government, affecting everything from consumer protection to monetary policy.

The stakes extend beyond theoretical constitutional interpretation. The Court has already allowed the Trump administration to proceed with mass immigration program terminations and other major policy changes through emergency orders while litigation continues, demonstrating the immediate real-world impact of these judicial decisions.

If the Court expands presidential removal authority, it would enable the White House to rapidly replace independent regulators and carry out major policy changes before courts can review them, with fewer practical checks on abrupt shifts in direction.

At stake is whether independent agencies like the FTC and Federal Reserve can maintain insulation from partisan political control.

What To Know

The constitutional dispute centers on a seemingly simple question with complex implications: who can fire federal officials, and under what circumstances?

Nelson explains that while Article II vests executive power in the president, the Constitution remains largely silent on removal except for impeachment. This silence has become a battleground for competing interpretations.

Chief Justice John Roberts has led the charge toward expanded presidential power, writing in Seila Law v. CFPB (2020) that presidential removal authority “follows from the text of Article II, was settled by the First Congress, and was confirmed in the landmark decision Myers v. United States.” The Court appears poised to extend this reasoning further, potentially overturning Humphrey’s Executor (1935), which has protected independent agency officials from at-will removal for nearly ninety years.

Nelson systematically challenges each pillar of Roberts’s argument.

He disputes that Article II’s “executive Power” includes the English monarch’s historical removal powers, citing recent scholarship distinguishing between executive authority and royal prerogative. He also contests the historical narrative about the First Congress, arguing that careful examination of 1789 debates reveals no consensus on presidential removal power, despite current Court assertions.

The practical implications are already visible. Georgetown law professor Steve Vladeck wrote on Substack earlier this month that the Trump administration sought emergency action from the Court 19 times in its first 20 weeks—matching the former President Joe Biden administration’s total over four years—and succeeded in 10 of 12 decided applications.

Recent immigration cases demonstrate this pattern: the Court allowed termination of parole programs for hundreds of thousands of migrants and permitted deportations to proceed despite lower court injunctions requiring notice and opportunity to seek protection.

What People Are Saying

Professor Caleb Nelson, in his analysis: “If most of what the federal government currently does on a daily basis is ‘executive,’ and if the President must have full control over each and every exercise of ‘executive’ power by the federal government (including an unlimitable ability to remove all or almost all executive officers for reasons good or bad), then the President has an enormous amount of power—more power, I think, than any sensible person should want anyone to have, and more power than any member of the founding generation could have anticipated.”

He added: “I am an originalist, and if the original meaning of the Constitution compelled this outcome, I would be inclined to agree that the Supreme Court should respect it until the Constitution is amended through the proper processes. But both the text and the history of Article II are far more equivocal than the current Court has been suggesting. In the face of such ambiguities, I hope that the Justices will not act as if their hands are tied and they cannot consider any consequences of the interpretations that they choose.”

Judge Clay D. Land, Middle District of Georgia, in a May decision: “Allowing constitutional rights to be dependent upon the grace of the executive branch would be a dereliction of duty by this third and independent branch of government and would be against the public interest.”

Justice Elena Kagan, at a judicial conference in California in July: “Courts are supposed to explain things. Offering reasons for judicial decisions is an essential protection against arbitrary power—to ensure that like cases are being treated alike.”

What Happens Next

The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in November regarding presidential authority to impose tariffs under emergency powers, while removal cases involving FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter and Federal Reserve Board member Lisa Cook await resolution.

The Court’s decisions could eliminate statutory protections for independent agency officials, potentially affecting thousands of positions across agencies overseeing financial markets, consumer protection, communications, and trade.

https://www.newsweek.com/ex-clarence-thomas-clerk-sounds-alarm-expected-supreme-court-move-10873224

Tampa Bay Times: Bondi’s firing of federal prosecutor in Miami threatened to derail big Medicare fraud trial

U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi fired a federal prosecutor in Miami last week because he had posted critical blog commentary about Donald Trump during his first term as president — a politically fraught decision that nearly derailed an upcoming trial.

Bondi’s firing of Will Rosenzweig threatened to upend the trial of two Medicare fraud defendants set to start on Monday because he was the lead prosecutor and the U.S. Attorney’s Office said it was not prepared to proceed without him. A fellow prosecutor involved in the case asked a federal judge to delay the start of the trial until early November, saying if he didn’t grant his request, the U.S. Attorney’s Office would consider dropping the healthcare fraud and conspiracy charges against them.

Normally, when federal prosecutors weigh whether to dismiss an indictment before trial, it’s for lack of evidence — not for lack of a prosecutor to try the case — underscoring perhaps the unintended consequences of Bondi’s firing of Rosenzweig on Sept. 23 while he was observing the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, with his family.

At a key hearing on Friday, U.S. District Judge Donald Graham granted part of the prosecutor’s request. Graham kept to his initial schedule to start the trial with jury selection on Monday, but he delayed the opening statements and government’s presentation of evidence until Nov. 3.

Graham’s decision appeared to salvage the Medicare fraud trial, giving the U.S. Attorney’s Office extra time to replace Rosenzweig and bring the new prosecutor up to speed on the case.

Until Friday, it had been touch and go.

In a court filing on Thursday, Assistant U.S. Attorney David Turken told Graham that if he “denies this motion” for a delay, the prosecutor “may recommend dismissal” of the indictment against the two defendants.

“There is currently no one at the U.S. Attorney’s Office who is sufficiently familiar with the discovery and evidence in this case to refute the expected unmeritorious discovery allegations by defense counsel at trial,” Turken wrote, adding that “the [federal] government shutdown [on Wednesday] is further complicating the government’s ability to prepare this trial.

“Dimissal of this matter would not be in the interest of justice,” added Turken, who has been involved in the case since the defendants were indicted by a grand jury last year.

Immediately after Rosenzweig’s firing by Bondi last week, Turken asked Graham to delay the trial until March of next year. The judge denied it, saying the trial will begin on Oct. 6 with jury selection but allowed for the opening statements and trial evidence to get underway two weeks later, Oct. 20. Turken asked the judge to reconsider, seeking to postpone the trial another two weeks, until Nov. 3, which the judge did in Friday’s hearing.

Millions of dollars in false billing alleged

Prosecutors, who are alleging millions of dollars in false insurance billing for medical equipment, telemedicine and other services, are expected to present more than 40 government witnesses and 400 exhibits. The trial will last more than a month.

Defense attorneys for the two defendants, Michael Kochen and Sandro Herek, opposed a continuation of the trial, noting that the federal prosecutors had already requested a long delay after Rosenzweig’s firing and Judge Graham denied it, though he allowed for a short two-week postponement for opening statements and trial evidence. A third defendant, Marcello Kochen, will be tried separately because of an illness.

“The Government’s position is that it will not be ready for trial, as currently scheduled,” the Kochens’ defense attorneys, Jayne Weintraub, Christopher Cavallo and Jonathan Etra, wrote in a court filing on Thursday. “That was the same position in the original motion. For that reason alone, the motion for reconsideration should be denied.”

Herek’s defense lawyer, David Tarras, said that while he “empathizes with the unexpected termination of Will Rosenzweig and the administrative difficulties this most certainly causes for the Government, Sandro Herek should not have to suffer for it.”

A prominent defense attorney who is not involved in the Medicare fraud case said the turn of events was highly unusual in federal court, but that federal prosecutors should not be allowed to delay the trial any further because of the circumstances of Rosenzweig’s firing.

“The government tells defendants all the time that ‘decisions have consequences,’ “ Miami lawyer David O. Markus told the Miami Herald. “They made their decision with respect to their trial lawyer. The consequence is simple: The trial goes on.

“State court manages prosecutor turnover every day, and federal courts can too,” he added.

Bondi fires prosecutor on Rosh Hashana

Rosenzweig took a short break from his work at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami to observe the Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, last week.

But he noticed something was amiss when his office-issued mobile phone wasn’t working. He called the office to find out what was wrong.

Rosenzweig soon learned his phone was shut off because Bondi fired him. He did not see her terse Sept. 23 email dismissing him on Rosh Hashana — making the 39-year-old lawyer the third federal prosecutor in the Southern District of Florida to be summarily fired by the Bondi-led Justice Department since Trump started his second term as president in January.

But Rosenzweig — considered to be among the rising prosecutors in the office — wasn’t fired because he had been associated with the criminal investigations of Trump by the Justice Department’s special counsel during the prior Biden administration. That was why two other respected federal prosecutors in the Miami office were abruptly terminated this year.

Rather, Rosenzweig was fired, according to multiple sources, because of the negative things he said about Trump on a social media blog before he became a federal prosecutor in Miami. When he was working for the prominent law firm Kobre & Kim in Washington during Trump’s first term, Rosenzweig posted criticisms of the president starting in 2017 — posts that were recently brought to the attention of the Justice Department.

Rosenzweig, who obtained his bachelor’s and law degrees from Cornell University, joined the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami in September 2020 — toward the end of Trump’s first term before he lost the presidential election to Joe Biden.

Rosenzweig worked on dozens of complex cases as a prosecutor in the economic crimes section, which focuses on healthcare fraud, money laundering and other financial schemes. Of late, Rosenzweig was deeply involved in the Medicare fraud case that was scheduled for trial in early October.

His termination shocked several colleagues, who took note of the terrible timing and pettiness of his firing, calling it another “frogmarch.” They also said his loss would be a significant blow to an office that has witnessed a “brain drain” of veteran talent over the past year.

Other firings

In late January, Miami federal prosecutor Michael Thakur, 46, a Harvard Law School graduate who worked on the documents case accusing Trump of withholding top secret materials at his Palm Beach estate, was fired along with dozens of others in the Justice Department who were members of the special counsel’s team.

In addition to Thakur, Anne McNamara, a former federal prosecutor in the Miami office before joining Smith’s team in Washington, was also terminated.

The Justice Department’s rolling purges of lawyers and employees who participated in the two federal criminal cases against Trump — which Smith dismissed after Trump won the 2024 presidential election — are expected to continue in Washington and other regions of the country.

https://www.tampabay.com/news/florida/2025/10/03/bondi-florida-prosecutor-fired-medicare-fraud


So which was more important? Prosecuting two major Medicare fraudsters, or getting revenge on behalf of King Donald for a blog post that was written sometime in 2016-2020?

King Donald’s suck-up, the bimbo bitch Bondi, opted for the revenge and fired the prosecutor just before the trial was to start.

The criminal weaponization of our Department of Justice continues.