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Sunday, February 08, 2026

US companies accused of ‘AI washing’ in citing artificial intelligence for job losses | US news | The Guardian

US companies accused of ‘AI washing’ in citing artificial intelligence for job losses

"While AI is having an impact on the workplace, experts suggest tariffs, overhiring during the pandemic and simply maximising profits may be bigger factors

people walking
The Amazon headquarters in Seattle, Washington. Amazon’s laid off 16,000 workers in January in a move its vice-president linked to AI. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

Over the last year, US corporate leaders have often explained layoffs by saying the positions were no longer needed because artificial intelligence had made their companies more efficient, replacing humans with computers.

But some economists and technology analysts have expressed skepticism about such justifications and instead think that such workforce cuts are driven by factors like the impact of tariffs, overhiring during the Covid-19 pandemic and perhaps simple maximising of profits.

In short, the CEOs are allegedly engaged in “AI-washing”.

“You can say, ‘We are integrating the newest technology into our business processes, so we are very much a technological frontrunner, and we have to let go of these people,’” said Fabian Stephany, a departmental research lecturer at the Oxford Internet Institute.

In 2025, AI was cited as a reason for more than 54,000 layoffs, according to a December report from the consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

In January, Amazon alone laid off 16,000 workers after making 14,000 reductions in October.

Beth Galetti, senior vice-president of people experience and technology at Amazon, explained in an October memo that they were trimming staff because “AI is the most transformative technology we’ve seen since the internet, and it’s enabling companies to innovate much faster than ever before.

“We’re convinced that we need to be organized more leanly,” Galetti added.

The Hewlett-Packard CEO, Enrique Lores, also said in a November earnings call that the company would use AI to “improve customer satisfaction and boost productivity”, which means the company could cut 6,000 people in the “next years”.

In April, Luis von Ahn, CEO of the language-learning app company Duolingo, announced that the venture would “gradually stop using contractors to do work that AI can handle”.

But the reason for such layoffs is often actually financial, according to a January reportfrom the market research firm Forrester. The company projects that only 6% of US jobs will be automated by 2030.

Companies could use AI to replace people working in call centers and technical writing, but they don’t yet have apps that can replace most occupations and probably won’t soon, said JP Gownder, a Forrester vice-president and principal analyst.

“A lot of companies are making a big mistake because their CEO, who isn’t very deep into the weeds of AI, is saying, ‘Well, let’s go ahead and lay off 20 to 30% of our employees and we will backfill them with AI,’” Gownder said. “If you do not have a mature, deployed-AI application ready to do the job … it could take you 18 to 24 months to replace that person with AI – if it even works.”

But there are benefits to attributing layoffs to AI even if that is not the case.

For example, the Challenger report stated that tariffs were cited as the reasons for fewer than 8,000 layoffs, a fraction of the number attributed to AI.

“Most economists would tell you that that was implausible,” said Martha Gimbel, executive director and co-founder of the Budget Lab at Yale University. “ChatGPT was only released three years ago … It is not the case that a new technology develops and the workforce adjusts immediately. That is just not how it works.”

After a news report stated that Amazon planned to display how much Donald Trump’s tariffs increased product pricing, the White House described it as a “hostile and political act”.

An Amazon spokesperson then said, “This was never approved and is not going to happen.”

“You have seen a real hesitance among some parts of corporate America to say anything negative about the economic impacts of the Trump administration because they feel that there will be consequences,” Gimbel said. “By saying that the layoffs are due to new efficiencies created by AI, you avoid that potential pushback.”

CEOs could also be blaming layoffs on AI advancements when they actually just overhired during the pandemic, Gownder said.

“That was driven by low interest rates. That was driven by talent wars. That was driven by some dynamics that are not in place any more,” he said.

Still, there are instances where CEOs linked layoffs to AI where that is more likely to be the legitimate reason, the economists said.

For example, Marc Benioff, CEO of the cloud-based software company Salesforce, said during an interview on the podcast The Logan Bartlett Show that he reduced his customer staff from 9,000 to 5,000 because he now uses AI agents.

“I need less heads,” he said.

Stephany said that was plausible.

“The work that has been described – particularly online and customer support – is, in terms of tasks and required skills, relatively close to what current AI systems can perform,” Stephany said.

But that does not mean the public should just accept Benioff’s claim, the AI researchers said.

“I think CEO statements are possibly the worst way to figure out how technological change is affecting the labor market,” Gimbel said. “That is not to say that CEOs are lying … It’s to say that there’s incentive effects in what gets covered.”

Not long after Amazon’s vice-president linked the October layoffs to AI, the CEO, Andy Jassy, backpedaled.

He said they were “not really financially driven, and it’s not even really AI-driven, not right now. It really is culture.”

And months after the Duolingo CEO stated that the company would be “AI first” and only add to its headcount “if a team cannot automate more of their work”, he told the New York Times that the company had never laid off full-time employees and did not plan to.

“From the beginning, we’ve had contractors that we use for temporary tasks, and our contractor force has gone up and down depending on needs,” he said.

An employee laid off by Amazon in October described herself as a “heavy user of AI”.

“There were certain tools that I built specifically for my team’s use, as well as some of our customer teams to use,” said the former principal program manager, whose last day at Amazon was in January and asked not to be identified to protect her privacy because she has not yet received severance pay.

She does not think that AI is why she was terminated but instead “maybe aided the ability to have a more junior person do some of the work”.

After an employee told her, “Bring me up to speed on the stuff you were working on. We’re going to assign this to one of these new people,” it became clear “that this work wasn’t going to stop but that they were going to get someone who was paid far less to do that work”, she said.

She added: “I was laid off to save the cost of human labor.”

US companies accused of ‘AI washing’ in citing artificial intelligence for job losses | US news | The Guardian

Washington Post C.E.O. Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure - The New York Times

Washington Post C.E.O. Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure

"His departure came days after the company cut 30 percent of the staff. He will be replaced in the interim by Jeff D’Onofrio, the chief financial officer, the company said.

Will Lewis in a dark blue blazer and a white shirt leans against a brick wall.
Will Lewis, the chief executive and publisher of The Washington Post, has stepped down, the company announced Saturday.Carlotta Cardana/Bloomberg

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Will Lewis, the embattled chief executive and publisher of The Washington Post, has stepped down, the company announced Saturday, days after the newspaper came under widespread criticism for laying off hundreds of its journalists.

Mr. Lewis said in a statement that he had made the decision “in order to ensure the sustainable future of The Post.” His email, which was terse, thanked only Jeff Bezos, the owner of The Post, and did not mention journalists at the newspaper.

Mr. Lewis left three days after the company, facing years of financial losses, undertook a significant round of layoffs that cut 30 percent of the staff — more than 300 journalists — decimating The Post’s local, international and sports coverage. Marty Baron, the celebrated former editor of The Post, called it one of the “darkest days in the history of one of the world’s greatest news organizations.”

In a news release announcing Mr. Lewis’s departure, Mr. Bezos said that The Post has “an essential journalistic mission and an extraordinary opportunity.” He added, “Each and every day our readers give us a road map to success.” He did not mention the cost-cutting in his statement.

Jeff D’Onofrio, the chief financial officer of The Post, was named acting chief executive.

Mr. Lewis’s sudden exit took many at The Post by surprise. He was seen in meetings on Wednesday and gave no indication he was leaving, according to one person familiar with the matter. The next day, Mr. Lewis was photographed at an event before the Super Bowl in San Francisco. The juxtaposition of that photo with the shuttering of The Post’s sports department as part of the layoffs drew widespread outcry from current and former Post staff members.

And it was Matt Murray, the newspaper’s top editor, who delivered the grim news of the layoffs to employees over a Zoom call; Mr. Lewis did not participate.

Katie Mettler, a former chair of the Washington Post Guild, said on Saturday: “I’m glad Will Lewis has been fired. I wish it had happened before he fired all my friends.”

Mr. Lewis did not respond to requests for comment on Saturday.

Mr. Bezos brought in Mr. Lewis at the beginning of 2024 to transform the publication and turn around years of financial losses and audience decline. The Post has yet to achieve consistent profitability, despite a hodgepodge of new strategies rolled out by Mr. Lewis, including the use of artificial intelligence, the inclusion of a new opinion product called “Ripple” and a “big hairy audacious goal,” or B.H.A.G., of reaching 200 million paid users. (It is unclear how many paid subscribers The Post has, since it’s a private company.)

Mr. Lewis, who started his career in Britain as a reporter before rising in the ranks, was previously the chief executive of Dow Jones and the publisher of The Wall Street Journal, which he left in 2020.

His tenure at The Post was marked by a mass exodus of journalists — the staff had already been reduced by buyouts last year — and broad dissatisfaction in the newsroom. He also faced questions about his journalistic ethics after news outlets, including his own, began looking into his conduct at British newspapers.

In May 2024, Mr. Lewis announced his plan to create a third newsroom division at The Post, separate from core news coverages areas of politics and business and focused on social media and service journalism. The Post’s executive editor, Sally Buzbee, abruptly resigned, and Mr. Lewis hired two of his former colleagues as top editors.

The New York Times reported that Ms. Buzbee and Mr. Lewis had clashed shortly before her exit when he objected to the newsroom’s plans to cover developments in the phone-hacking lawsuit winding its way through the British courts that included allegations against him and others. Mr. Lewis has not been charged and has repeatedly rejected accusations that he had acted to conceal wrongdoing while an executive at Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp more than a decade ago. He denied that he had pressured Ms. Buzbee not to cover the story.

A day after the newspaper announced that Ms. Buzbee was leaving, Mr. Lewis held a town-hall meeting to announce her replacement. During the meeting, he tried a little tough love, telling reporters and editors: “People aren’t reading your stuff. Right. I can’t sugarcoat it anymore.” His remarks stuck a sour note, and he hadn’t addressed the newsroom in person since.

Last year, as the distrust between Mr. Lewis and The Post deepened, two former senior Washington Post editors — Leonard Downie, the paper’s top editor for 17 years, and Bob Kaiser, who spent more than a half-century at the newspaper, including as managing editor, emailed Mr. Bezos, urging him to replace Mr. Lewis. Mr. Bezos never responded.

Mr. Murray acknowledged the lingering issues at The Post in an interview with Fox News this past week: “I think morale has been a challenge at the Post for a while. It was a problem when I showed up, and it remains one in some ways now,” said Mr. Murray, who started at The Post in 2024.

Early in his tenure, Mr. Lewis made personal overtures to The Post’s journalists to inspire confidence in the future. On a summer night in August 2024, he met Josh Dawsey, then a political enterprise reporter for The Post, at the Four Seasons in Georgetown and pitched a new vision for The Post, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Over several drinks, Mr. Lewis told Mr. Dawsey that he intended to be there for the long haul — at least seven years — and that he would outlast his critics, the people said. After the meeting, Mr. Dawsey told colleagues that he had offered to make introductions for Mr. Lewis to help him build relationships in the newsroom.

Mr. Dawsey never heard from Mr. Lewis again."

Washington Post C.E.O. Will Lewis Steps Down After Stormy Tenure - The New York Times

Saturday, February 07, 2026

Full Speech | Jon Ossoff in Atlanta | Rally for Our Republic | 02.07.2026 - YouTube


(This was as great rally. I have always really liked Jon. The rally was packed and fun. Atlanta traffic to and from the airport from the Northside was terrible.)

(776) Full Speech | Jon Ossoff in Atlanta | Rally for Our Republic | 02.07.2026 - YouTube

(775) ‘Time machine back to the 1860s’: Inside Trump’s racist track record amid Obama video backlash - YouTube

 

Republicans Respond To Trump”s Racist Repost Of Obamas

 

Why Cheikh Anta Diop Still Disturbs History Today

 

‘I Didn’t Make a Mistake’: Trump Declines to Apologize for Racist Video of Obamas

 

‘I Didn’t Make a Mistake’: Trump Declines to Apologize for Racist Video of Obamas 

(Americans of good will, the public, the media and Congress must demand Trump’s immediate resignation!)



“President Trump posted a racist video clip depicting former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama as apes, sparking widespread outrage, including from members of his own party. Despite initial deflection and attempts to blame others, Trump eventually deleted the video after facing criticism. The incident highlights Trump’s history of making degrading remarks about people of color and his use of offensive imagery and slurs.

The video clip that President Trump posted in a late-night flurry of social media activity caused an unusually strong and public outcry from members of his own party.

President Trump is shown in profile, wearing a dark suit and colorful tie. He stands at a lectern, illuminated by blue light on a dark stage.
The decision to delete the link from his Truth Social account was an unusual walk-back by President Trump.Kenny Holston/The New York Times

President Trump posted a blatantly racist video clip portraying former President Barack Obama and the former first lady Michelle Obama as apes, but he insisted he had nothing to apologize for even after he deleted the video following an outcry.

The clip, set to “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” was spliced near the end of a 62-second video that promoted conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and was among a flurry of links posted by Mr. Trump late Thursday night. It was the latest in a pattern by Mr. Trump of promoting offensive imagery and slurs about Black Americans and others.

Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Friday, Mr. Trump said he only saw the beginning of the video. “I just looked at the first part, it was about voter fraud in some place, Georgia,” Mr. Trump said. “I didn’t see the whole thing.”

He then tried to deflect blame, suggesting he had given the link to someone else to post. “I gave it to the people, generally they’d look at the whole thing but I guess somebody didn’t,” he told reporters.

Still, Mr. Trump offered no contrition when pressed. “No, I didn’t make a mistake,” he said.

The White House response to the video over the course of the day — from defiance to retreat to doubling down — was a remarkable glimpse into an administration trying to control the damage in the face of widespread outrage, including from the president’s own party.

The clip was in line with Mr. Trump’s history of making degrading remarks about people of color, women and immigrants, and he has for years singled out the Obamas. Across Mr. Trump’s administration, racist images and slogans have become common on government websites and accounts, with the White House, Labor Department and Homeland Security Department all having promoted posts that echo white supremacist messaging.

But the latest video struck a nerve that appeared to take the White House by surprise. The depiction of Mr. and Mrs. Obama as apes perpetuates a racist trope, historically used by slave traders and segregationists to dehumanize Black people and justify lynchings.

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At first, the president’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, brushed off criticism of the video and made no attempt to distance the president from it.

“This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from the Lion King,” Ms. Leavitt on Friday morning. “Please stop the fake outrage and report on something today that actually matters to the American public.”

But a clear voice of disapproval emerged from Republicans on Capitol Hill, who are typically reluctant to call out the president and rarely do so in the forceful tones heard on Friday.

Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, the Senate’s only Black Republican and a close ally of Mr. Trump, wrote on X that he hoped the post was fake “because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.”

“The President should remove it,” he said.

Mr. Scott is the head of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the party’s campaign arm in charge of trying to hold the Senate, a key role leading up to the midterm election in November.

Representative Mike Lawler, Republican of New York, said the president’s post “is wrong and incredibly offensive.” Representative Michael R. Turner, Republican of Ohio, said the “racist images” of the Obamas were “offensive, heart breaking, and unacceptable.” Senator Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi, said the president “should take it down and apologize.”

After the post had been up for about 12 hours, Mr. Trump deleted it — a remarkable retreat by a president who has long been accused of demeaning people of color.

As the criticism continued to grow, Trump allies sought to deflect blame from the president by vouching for his character and saying an unidentified staffer was at fault. A pastor with ties to Mr. Trump claimed he had spoken directly to the president on Friday and that Mr. Trump said he had not posted the video and knew the imagery in it was “wrong, offensive and unacceptable.”

Mr. Trump did not go nearly that far in his remarks on Air Force One.

The president regularly uses Truth Social to communicate his views; he and a handful of trusted aides have access to his account. His feed is a patchwork of policy, political bluster and, increasingly, A.I. memes and deep fakes.

The White House usually responds to criticism about such things by doubling down, laughing it off or suggesting that critics cannot take a joke.

Last month, when the administration admitted to doctoring a photo of Nekima Levy Armstrong, a Minnesota protester, to make the Black civil rights attorney look disheveled and distressed, a spokesman said that it was nothing more than a “meme” and that “the memes will continue.”

In October, when Mr. Trump posted an A.I.-generated video depicting Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the House Democratic leader, with a fake mustache and a sombrero — an image that Mr. Jeffries called racist and bigoted — Vice President JD Vance said that he thought it was “funny,” and that the administration was “having a good time.

Doug Heye, a G.O.P. strategist, said the response this time from Republicans was unusual. The White House, he said, “realized what a colossal screw-up this was, and they realized that because elected Republicans were directly pushing back on them for one of the rare times we’ve ever seen.”

A spokeswoman for the Obamas declined to comment on the video.

Mr. Trump’s attacks on Mr. Obama go back years. As far back as 2011, Mr. Trump amplified the false “birther” conspiracy theory that Mr. Obama was not born in the United States, and questioned the legitimacy of his presidency. Last year, Mr. Trump shared an A.I.-generated video of Mr. Obama being arrested in the Oval Office, and later in prison.

The Obamas have rarely responded to Mr. Trump’s attacks over the years, but Mrs. Obama, in a speech at the 2024 Democratic National Convention, spoke candidly about being the target of racism by Mr. Trump.

“For years, Donald Trump did everything in his power to try to make people fear us,” Mrs. Obama said. “See, his limited and narrow view of the world made him feel threatened by the existence of two hard-working, highly educated, successful people who happened to be Black.”

“It’s his same old con,” she added, “doubling down on ugly, misogynistic, racist lies as a substitute for real ideas and solutions that will actually make people’s lives better.”

Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian, said that the video was “just hard-boiled racism using the oldest trope against Black people imaginable.”

Mr. Trump’s use of A.I.-generated content has brought once-fringe content into the mainstream. Hundreds of users, posting anonymously each day, have produced thousands of videos and images displaying their fondness for the Trump administration and mocking the president’s enemies. Their work is often crude and sometimes racist.

Mr. Trump has become a prolific re-poster of such content.

He often shares posts himself in late-night outbursts, like the string of posts he made on Thursday night. At other times, he dictates posts to one of his aides or has an aide share a post that has been prepared for him, including updates on international relations and political endorsements. Many of his posts are conspiratorial or cruel mockery of his opponents.

The video he reposted on Thursday starts off as a look at conspiracy theories about the 2020 election. It originally aired during a 2021 event hosted by Mike Lindell, the chief executive of MyPillow and one of the most prolific spreaders of 2020 election misinformation.

Narrating is Phil Waldron, a retired Army colonel who was subpoenaed by the Jan. 6 committee for efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

At the end, spliced in, is the clip portraying the Obamas, which appeared to have been taken from a video that was shared in October by a user on X with the caption “President Trump: King of the Jungle.”

In that video, several high-profile Democrats — including former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Mayor Zohran Mamdani of New York, former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and former Vice President Kamala Harris — were shown as various animals, while Mr. Trump was depicted as a lion. The video ended with the animals bowing down to Mr. Trump. (The president shared only the part of the video where the Obamas are shown as apes.)

Quentin James, a co-founder of the Collective PAC, which aims to elect Black officials in America, likened the video to a “digital minstrel show.”

“The fact that a sitting president is now using A.I. to circulate the same dehumanizing imagery that appeared in 19th-century propaganda should alarm every American, regardless of party,” Mr. James said. “This is the through line from minstrelsy to Truth Social, and the intent is identical: to strip Black people of their humanity for political entertainment.”

Reporting was contributed by Tyler Pager, Dylan Freedman, Robert Jimison and Katie Rogers from Washington.

Erica L. Green is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.

Isabella Kwai is a Times reporter based in London, covering breaking news and other trends.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump and his administration.

A version of this article appears in print on Feb. 7, 2026, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Posts, Then Erases, Racist Video of Obamas.” 

Prosecutors Began Investigating Renee Good’s Killing. Washington Told Them to Stop.

 

Prosecutors Began Investigating Renee Good’s Killing. Washington Told Them to Stop.

“After an immigration agent fatally shot Renee Good, federal prosecutors in Minnesota sought a warrant to search her vehicle for evidence in a civil rights investigation. However, senior officials, including the FBI director, ordered them to stop, fearing it would contradict President Trump’s claims about the shooting. This led to a crisis in the Minnesota U.S. attorney’s office, with about a dozen prosecutors resigning in protest.

Federal prosecutors had a warrant to collect evidence from Ms. Good’s vehicle, but Trump administration leaders said to drop it. About a dozen prosecutors have departed, leaving the Minnesota U.S. attorney’s office in turmoil.

Joseph H. Thompson, at a microphone, stands near other men in suits in front of several flags.
Joseph H. Thompson, center, at a news conference last year where he announced charges in a fraud scheme tied to Minnesota’s federally funded housing stabilization program.Ben Brewer for The New York Times

Hours after an immigration agent fatally shot Renee Good inside her S.U.V. on a Minneapolis street last month, a senior federal prosecutor in Minnesota sought a warrant to search the vehicle for evidence in what he expected would be a standard civil rights investigation into the agent’s use of force.

The prosecutor, Joseph H. Thompson, wrote in an email to colleagues that the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, a state agency that specializes in investigating police shootings, would team up with the F.B.I. to determine whether the shooting had been justified and lawful or had violated Ms. Good’s civil rights. 

But later that week, as F.B.I. agents equipped with a signed warrant prepared to document blood spatter and bullet holes in Ms. Good’s S.U.V., they received orders to stop, according to several people with knowledge of the events who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The orders, they said, came from senior officials, including Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, several of whom worried that pursuing a civil rights investigation — by using a warrant obtained on that basis — would contradict President Trump’s claim that Ms. Good “violently, willfully, and viciously ran over the ICE Officer” who fired at her as she drove her vehicle.

Over the next few days, top Department of Justice officials presented alternative approaches. First, they suggested prosecutors ask a judge to sign a new search warrant for the vehicle, predicated on a criminal investigation into whether the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who shot Ms. Good, Jonathan Ross, had been assaulted by her. Later, they urged the prosecutors to instead investigate Ms. Good’s partner, who had been with Ms. Good on the morning of the shooting, confronting immigration agents in their Minneapolis neighborhood.

Several of the career federal prosecutors in Minnesota, including Mr. Thompson, balked at the new approach, which they viewed as legally dubious and incendiary in a state where anger over a federal immigration crackdown was already boiling over. Mr. Thompson and five others left the office in protest, setting off a broader wave of resignations that has left Minnesota’s U.S. attorney’s office severely understaffed and in crisis. Officials have not said whether they ultimately obtained a new warrant to search the vehicle. 

From an office of about 25 criminal litigators, gone are the top prosecutors who had overseen a sprawling, yearslong investigation into fraud in Minnesota’s social services programs, which the White House months ago cited as a reason for the immigration crackdown in the state. 

The departures also have drained the U.S. attorney’s office as it prepares complex cases, including trials in the fatal attack on a Minnesota state lawmakerand in a terrorism case, and investigations into fentanyl trafficking. 

The prosecutors who remain have been flooded with new cases related to the immigration crackdown — allegations of assaults on federal officers and lawsuits challenging the legality of individual detentions of immigrants.

“This is potentially destroying all of the progress that we have made, working together between local and federal law enforcement officials in a very coordinated way, to actually go after the worst of the worst,” Brian O’Hara, the Minneapolis police chief, said in an interview. 

What you should know. The Times makes a careful decision any time it uses an anonymous source. The information the source supplies must be newsworthy and give readers genuine insight.

This account of tumult at the U.S. attorney’s office in Minnesota is based on interviews with about a dozen people in Minnesota and Washington, D.C., familiar with the events. Some spoke on the condition of anonymity, saying they feared retaliation from the administration. Some read from notes they took during key moments. 

Cindy Burnham, a spokeswoman for the F.B.I. in Minnesota, declined to comment for this article, as did Daniel N. Rosen, the U.S. attorney in Minnesota. Emily Covington, a Justice Department spokeswoman, did not respond to a request for comment.

A Fraud Scandal

The crisis at the U.S. attorney’s office followed a turbulent year. 

The Minnesota office was led temporarily by assistant U.S. attorneys for months as Mr.  Trump’s nominee for U.S. attorney, Mr. Rosen, awaited confirmation.

Some career prosecutors in the office, which has a long reputation for winning complex and high-profile cases, were unsettled by a memo that Attorney General Pam Bondi issued in February 2025, signaling that the Department of Justice would “zealously advance” Mr. Trump’s policies.

For months, the prosecutors in Minnesota focused their attention on high-impact cases that were already underway, including the investigation into fraud in social services programs, largely insulating the office from some priorities in Washington. The office mantra became: “The best defense is a good offense.” 

That approach unraveled late last year. News articles about the fraud cases — and later a video by a right-wing influencer — drew attention from Mr. Trump. Administration officials focused on the fact that most of the defendants charged in the sprawling fraud cases were of Somali descent. Though most Somalis in Minnesota are citizens or legal residents of the United States, White House officials cited them and the rash of fraud as a reason to send thousands of immigration agents to the state. 

Tensions quickly rose on the streets between immigration agents and Minnesotans. And at the prosecutors’ office, the fraud investigations slowed as prosecutors said they were overwhelmed with requests for briefings from federal agencies on that issue.

Debating an Investigation

Not long after Ms. Good’s death, senior administration officials were quick to blame her for the shooting. Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, called Ms. Good a domestic terrorist, language that Vice President JD Vance echoed

Even in a rules-shattering administration, the hasty conclusions about the shooting shocked federal prosecutors in Minnesota. Veteran lawyers in the office watched numerous videos of the shooting. Virtually all presumed there would be a civil rights investigation into the use of force, an approach often used in shootings involving law enforcement officers.

Some believed that a civil rights investigation could establish that the ICE agent had a reasonable fear for his life when he opened fire as Ms. Good’s car began lurching toward him — the sort of police shooting investigators consider “awful but lawful.” Others suggested that such an investigation might find otherwise, or even that the failure of agents to provide medical aid to Ms. Good after the shooting might be deemed a civil rights violation. 

Even Chris Madel, a prominent Minnesota defense lawyer who provided legal advice to Mr. Ross, the agent, after the shooting, supported conducting a civil rights investigation. Mr. Madel worked at the Department of Justice years ago.

“In the absence of an independent use-of-force investigation, you lead the public to believe that there must be something to hide,” said Mr. Madel.

As Department of Justice officials pushed back against suggestions that a civil rights investigation was in order in the days after Ms. Good’s death, clashes between Minnesota residents and immigration agents escalated. Some prosecutors were met with resistance when they urged supervisors to open investigations into reports of assaults and abuses by federal agents. The Justice Department also blocked the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension from taking part in investigating Ms. Good’s killing, adding to prosecutors’ frustrations. 

At one point, Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol leader who was the face of the administration’s immigration crackdown in Los Angeles, Chicago and Minneapolis, called federal prosecutors, pressing them to charge demonstrators with crimes. When a prosecutor asked what the operation’s end goal was, several people familiar with the call recalled Mr. Bovino saying that he did not intend to “calm it down,” but instead, he said, “We’re going to put it down.”

The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment.

Not long after, Mr. Rosen, who took office as U.S. attorney in October, urged his top deputies again to seek the alternative warrant that leaders in Washington had called for, focusing on a criminal investigation into Ms. Good’s partner and her behavior and ties to protest groups. 

At that, Mr. Thompson submitted his resignation letter. Others soon followed.

Soon after, Ms. Bondi told Fox News that the lawyers who left “suddenly decided they didn’t want to support the men and women at ICE.” Referring to them as members of the “deep state,” Ms. Bondi said she had fired them, resulting in the loss of months of unused vacation they had banked. 

An Office on Edge

With roughly a dozen prosecutors gone, Mr. Rosen has worked to reassure those who remain in the office. As he sought to build a new leadership team, Mr. Rosen approached several prosecutors about possible promotions. At least three of them soon left the office: Allen Slaughter, the chief of narcotics investigations and cases from tribal territories; Dan Bobier, a fraud expert; and Lauren Roso, a national security specialist who was preparing to try a terrorism case. 

None of the prosecutors who have left the office have discussed their reasons publicly. 

Unease among prosecutors has continued to mount as the Justice Department announced a criminal investigation into leading Democrats in the state and charges against nine people, including two journalists, accused in connection to a protest at a church in St. Paul, Minn., where an ICE official serves as a pastor.

In recent days, as Mr. Rosen has sought to steady an office on edge, colleagues say he has made comments that unsettled them further. Several people said that Mr. Rosen vowed not to ask anyone to do anything illegal — an assurance that normally, the people said, would go without saying.

Mr. Rosen, a commercial litigator who had no prior criminal litigation experience, also has conveyed that the office, under his leadership, was committed to furthering the goals of Mr. Trump. 

In a declaration submitted as part of an immigration lawsuit late last month, Mr. Rosen described an office under extraordinary strain as a severely understaffed team found itself contending with a “flood” of cases that have grown out of the federal immigration crackdown. He said detained immigrants had filed more than 420 lawsuits in January alone. The office, he wrote, “is operating in a reactive mode,” with lawyers and paralegals “continuously working overtime.” 

Chief O’Hara said he was disappointed that Mr. Rosen had been unable to keep veteran prosecutors from leaving the office. “I couldn’t imagine being the leader of a team where so many of the best players that are just so central to the mission decide they’ve got to walk away because they don’t want their integrity to be compromised,” he said. 

Andrew Luger, who preceded Mr. Rosen as the U.S. attorney in Minnesota during the Obama and Biden administrations, said the exodus of prosecutors will have far-reaching implications, particularly for the stated purpose of the immigration crackdown: fighting fraud and crime. 

The top fraud experts in the office left. So did Melinda Williams, a veteran in prosecuting sex crimes and child pornography cases. Thomas Calhoun-Lopez, who oversaw the major violent crimes unit, also departed. 

“It will take years to build the contacts in state and local law enforcement that has been lost,” Mr. Luger said.

Glenn Thrush and Hamed Aleaziz contributed reporting. 

Ernesto Londoño is a Times reporter based in Minnesota, covering news in the Midwest and drug use and counternarcotics policy. He welcomes tips and can be reached at elondono.81 on Signal.“