DOJ Taps Pentagon JAGs and Auditors for Minnesota Fraud and ICE Surge Cases
The Pentagon is recruiting military judge advocates for short‑term details to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota, after the Justice Department asked for additional attorneys to be sent to Minneapolis as Special Assistant U.S. Attorneys beginning in March, according to an internal request obtained by CBS News. DOJ is also in talks with the Pentagon to deploy forensic auditors to Minnesota to work on COVID‑era welfare‑fraud cases and serve as expert witnesses, while separately detailing civilian prosecutors from nearby districts in Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Wisconsin and the Dakotas to backfill an office that has lost about 10 AUSAs, including veterans of the 'Feeding Our Future' child‑nutrition fraud investigation. The surge comes as DOJ expands probes into what the Trump administration brands 'Somali‑fraud' in Minnesota social‑services programs and as Minneapolis hosts the largest DHS deployment in its history under Operation Metro Surge, combining immigration raids with welfare‑fraud enforcement. Multiple senior Minnesota prosecutors recently resigned, in part over DOJ leadership’s refusal to treat ICE agent Jonathan Ross’s fatal shooting of Renee Good as a civil‑rights case and reported pressure to investigate her widow instead, and FBI and Civil Rights Division attorneys have been ordered to stay away from the shooting. The unusual use of military lawyers and auditors inside a civilian U.S. attorney’s office, especially against the backdrop of an aggressive, politicized fraud narrative centered on Somali‑Americans and the sidelining of civil‑rights oversight, is already raising alarms among legal observers who see echoes of past efforts to blur the line between military and domestic justice.
📌 Key Facts
- Pentagon request describes a short‑term volunteer detail beginning in March for military attorneys to serve as Special Assistant U.S. Attorneys in Minnesota.
- DOJ is negotiating to bring in Pentagon forensic auditors to assist fraud investigations and testify in court, on top of detailed prosecutors from Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Wisconsin, North Dakota and South Dakota.
- Minnesota’s U.S. Attorney’s Office has recently lost roughly 10 prosecutors, including lawyers tied to the Feeding Our Future case, and remaining career AUSAs have been largely sidelined.
- Senior Minnesota prosecutors resigned last week citing concern that the Renee Good ICE shooting is not being treated as a civil‑rights case and that there was pressure to investigate Good’s widow, while the FBI is not probing the shooter and Civil Rights Division staff have been barred from the case.
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