DOJ to Allow Hiring of US Prosecutors Straight Out of Law School
5 hours ago
- #Federal Prosecutors
- #Justice Department
- #Legal Hiring
- The Justice Department has waived the one-year legal experience requirement for new federal prosecutors due to mass departures.
- Some federal districts, like Minnesota and Southern Florida, can now hire prosecutors straight out of law school.
- Vacancy announcements in Minnesota, South Florida, Montana, Alaska, and Louisiana no longer list a minimum experience requirement.
- The DOJ aims to empower young prosecutors and improve community safety under Attorney General Bondi and Deputy AG Blanche.
- Federal prosecuting offices face challenges meeting court deadlines, especially in immigration cases, and have received criticism from judges.
- Former DOJ chief of staff Chad Mizelle encouraged Trump-supporting lawyers to apply for AUSA positions.
- Exceptions to the one-year rule previously existed for elite lawyers in the attorney general’s honors program or unpaid special assistants.
- Minnesota’s civil division, overwhelmed by habeas petitions from detained immigrants, has dropped the experience requirement.
- A Minnesota attorney was held in contempt for mishandling an immigration case, reflecting broader judicial scrutiny of DOJ attorneys.
- The Trump administration has used 'emergency jump teams' and military lawyers to address staffing shortages in US attorneys’ offices.