Judicial
Watch Sues for Records on Trump’s Would-Be
Assassin

Why is the FBI not releasing
what it knows about President Trump’s would-be assassin?
We filed a
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for all records regarding Thomas
Matthew Crooks, who attempted to assassinate President Trump on July 13,
2024, (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-02216)).
We sued after the FBI failed to respond to a July
24, 2024, FOIA request for:
All records, including but
not limited to, investigative reports, interview summaries (Forms 1023),
letterhead memoranda, photos, audio/visual recordings, database inquiries,
interagency communications, and any other records, whether contained in the
Central Records System or cross-referenced files, related to Thomas Matthew
Crooks, born September 20, 2003 in Butler Township, PA and died on July 13,
2024, who
attempted the assassination of former President Donald Trump on July 13,
2024.
All records of communication in any form, including but
not limited to emails, text messages, encrypted app communications and
voice recordings, between FBI officials and/or FBI sources, contractors,
and assets on the one hand, and Thomas Matthew Crooks on the other
hand.
On July 13, 2024, then-Republican presidential
candidate Trump survived
an assassination attempt while speaking at an open-air
campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Trump was shot and wounded in his
upper right ear by 20-year-old Crooks, who fired eight rounds from his
perch on top of a nearby building.
Crooks also killed one audience
member, firefighter Corey
Comperatore, and critically injured two others. Crooks was shot and
killed by the counter sniper team of the United States Secret
Service.
No more delays and excuses. The FBI should release what it
has on the man who tried to kill President Trump a full year ago. Attorney
General Bondi should direct a
full and immediate response to our lawsuit.
In March 2025, we sued
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for records related to security
provided for the rally in Butler, PA (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Homeland Security (No.
1:25-cv-00704)).
In September 2004, we sued
the Department of Homeland Security for Secret Service and other records
regarding potential increased protective services to former President
Trump’s security detail prior to the attempt on his life at his July 13
campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of
Homeland Security (No. 1:24-cv-02495)).
In
August 2024, we obtained records
from the district attorney’s office in Butler County, PA, detailing the
extensive preparation of local police for the rally at which former
President Trump was shot. The preparation included sniper teams, counter
assault teams and a quick response force. On August 9, in response to a
separate open records request, we obtained bodycam footage of the July 13
assassination events from the Butler Township Police
Department.
Judicial Watch Sues Justice Department
for Hunter Biden Pardon
Records
Joe Biden’s questionable pardons are all over the
news, but we’re focused on one in particular.
We filed a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for all records from the Offices of
Attorney General, Deputy Attorney General, and Associate Attorney General
regarding Joe Biden’s controversial pardon of Hunter Biden (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of State (No.
1:25-cv-02143)).
On December 1, 2024, then-President Biden issued a
full and unconditional pardon
to Hunter Biden for any federal offenses “which he has committed or may
have committed or taken part in during the period from January 1,
2014 through December 1, 2024.”
We sued after the Justice
Department failed to respond to a December 2, 2024, FOIA request
for:
Records and communications of the Offices of the
Attorney General, Deputy Attorney General, and/or Associate Attorney
General or their designated representatives, about the pardoning of Robert
Hunter Biden by his father, President Joe Biden.
The
Biden Justice Department officials at issue are: then-Attorney General
Merrick Garland; then-Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco; and
then-Associate Attorney General Benjamin Mizer.
Fox News reported
on June 5, 2025, that the pardon of Hunter Biden was the only one of the
over 1,500 pardons issued in the waning days of the Biden Administration
that President Biden signed by hand. All others were signed by the
so-called presidential autopen, the report states. The pardon also covers
the time Hunter Biden served on the board of directors of Ukrainian energy
firm Burisma Holdings.
The Hunter Biden pardon for undefined crimes
going back a decade is invalid on its face. The Trump Justice Department
should immediately release any and all records about
the Biden pardon scandal.
We have filed multiple federal lawsuits
focused on Biden family corruption.
A hearing was recently held in
the May 2023 FOIA lawsuit
against the National Archives for Biden family records and communications
regarding travel and finance transactions, as well as communications
between the Bidens and several known business associates (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. National Archives (No. 1:23-cv-01432).
In
February 2025, we filed a lawsuit
against the Justice Department for records and communications regarding the
Internal Revenue Service’s investigation of Hunter Biden (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice
(No.1:24-cv-03387)).
In June 2024, we received records from
the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) showing Mike Morell, former acting
CIA director under President Obama, requesting CIA permission to
publish a
letter by former intelligence community leaders stating that they
believed the laptop emails exposing Hunter Biden’s connections to Ukraine
were Russian disinformation. Morrell’s request for prepublication review
was approved in just six hours by the CIA (Judicial
Watch v. Central Intelligence Agency (No.
1:23-cv-01844)).
In October 2022, we sued the DOJ for all records in
the possession of FBI Supervisory Intelligence Analyst Brian Auten
regarding an August 6, 2020, briefing provided to members of the U.S.
Senate. Ron Johnson (R-WI) and Chuck Grassley (R-IA) raised concerns that
the briefing was intended to undermine the senators’ investigation of
Hunter Biden (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:22-cv-02821)).
We
filed a lawsuit against the U.S. State Department on April 20, 2022, for
messages sent through the SMART
(State Messaging and Archive Retrieval Toolkit) system that mention Hunter
Biden (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No.
1:22-cv-01066)).
In December 2020, State Department records
obtained through a Judicial Watch FOIA lawsuit showed that former U.S.
Ambassador to Ukraine Marie “Masha” Yovanovitch had specifically warned
in 2017 about corruption
allegations against Burisma Holdings. Previously in this case, State
Department records
included a briefing checklist of a February 22, 2019, meeting in Kyiv
between then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch and Sally
Painter, co-founder and chief operating officer of Blue Star Strategies, a
Democratic lobbying firm which was hired by Burisma Holdings to combat
corruption allegations. At the time of the meeting, Hunter Biden was
serving on the board of directors for Burisma Holdings (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No.
1:20-cv-00229)).
Sean O’Donnell, Former EPA
Inspector General, Joins Judicial Watch
Sean O’Donnell, a
distinguished former government attorney, has joined the litigation team at
Judicial Watch.
O’Donnell was U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) Inspector
General from 2020 to 2025, where he was a lone voice in the EPA warning
against “fast money” and careless spending. His reputation as a
relentless fighter against fraud, waste, and abuse was earned, having taken
the agency’s Office of Inspector General from one that realized only $3
million in annual monetary impact to one realizing over $2 billion in
2024.
From 2020 to 2022, O’Donnell was acting Inspector General at
the U.S. Department of Defense where he successfully led over 1,800
oversight professionals, stationed across the globe, in fighting fraud and
waste, promoting effectiveness, and ensuring ethical conduct throughout the
Defense
Department. During O’Donnell’s nearly three-year tenure, his office
recovered approximately $3.5 billion in civil and criminal cases and issued
331 reports, identifying over $1.25 billion in potential benefit to the
Defense Department.
For 15 years, from 2005 to 2020, O’Donnell was
at the U.S. Department of Justice, where he served as an award-winning
trial attorney and prosecutor, focusing on white collar and fraud cases, as
well as corruption and national security matters. His areas of focus at the
Justice Department included investigating and litigating whistleblower
allegations of fraud, waste, and abuse committed by government officials,
contractors, and grantees. Through his work, the Justice Department
recovered over $4 billion for the government and fraud victims.
Early
in his career at the Justice Department, O’Donnell enforced and ensured
compliance with laws protecting the right to vote and the integrity of
elections, including the Voting Rights Act, the National Voter Registration
Act (NVRA), and the Help America Vote Act.
O’Donnell clerked on the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and on the U.S. District Court
for the Western District of Texas. He also spent time in private practice,
working on intellectual property and antitrust
litigation.
O’Donnell has a bachelor’s degree in economics from
Texas A&M University, a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the
University of Washington, and a master’s degree in economics and a law
degree from the University of Texas at Austin.
We’re happy to have
Sean O’Donnell join the Judicial Watch team. His tremendous experience at
the Justice Department and as Inspector General for both the EPA and the
Defense Department is a perfect fit for Judicial Watch and should make
corrupt government officials nervous.
U.S. Invests
Millions to Crack Down
on Skyrocketing Food Stamp Fraud
Your tax dollars are being
handed out fraudulently by the billions through our porous food stamp
program, as our Corruption Chronicles blog reports:
Fraud
and corruption are so rampant within the nation’s mammoth food stamp
program that the government is quietly investing millions of dollars in a
special initiative aimed at cracking down on the waste that has long
plagued it. In fiscal year 2024 nearly 42 million low-income households got
food stamps at a cost of around $94 billion. A substantial chunk of
approximately $10 billion annually is paid out fraudulently and without
proper intervention the figure will only grow, according to a recent
academic study.
“Despite a 350 percent increase in spending on efforts to improve program
integrity over the past decade, waste and fraud—particularly from benefit
trafficking and eligibility misreporting—remain pervasive,” researchers
found.
This month the agency that administers the scandal-plagued
welfare program, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), announced it is
spending $5
million on a Fraud Framework aimed at cutting back on waste in the
bloated food stamp system, which was renamed Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) by the Obama administration to eliminate the
stigma of receiving public assistance. States, which distribute benefits
and determine eligibility, will receive up to $750,000 in funding to help
correct a problem they have essentially created. For years there have been
increased reports of food stamp theft by criminal actors through card
skimming schemes of the Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) system that
allows recipients to pay for food using the taxpayer-funded program as well
as
SNAP recipients intentionally committing fraud by violating program rules.
This includes falsifying income or identity to be eligible for benefits
they may not be entitled to, or by using benefits for anything other than
their intended purpose.
The $5 million Fraud Framework will
reportedly tackle the problem by strengthening efforts to detect potential
scams at the time of application, enhancing internal controls to protect
against employee fraud, and improving documentation around recipient fraud
or benefit theft processes. The framework will also better assess the
impact of current integrity efforts and initiatives through active
monitoring of a defined set of metrics and conduct “recipient integrity
education” that improves messaging through various channels, in multiple
languages, and in plain language rather than in legal jargon. The new
educational material will also ensure that food stamp recipients as well as
the public
understand what SNAP fraud is and how to avoid becoming victims or
committing program violations. Amusingly, the USDA writes in the grant
announcement that it has “zero tolerance for fraud” and continues to
implement measures to improve program integrity.
The reality is that
the problem has long persisted, peaking in recent years with a multitude of
incidents that have fleeced American taxpayers out of large sums. Just
weeks ago, Judicial Watch reported
on a case involving a bribed USDA employee who federal prosecutors say
helped run “one of the largest
food stamp frauds in U.S. history.” Adding insult to injury the longtime
USDA staffer, Arlasa Davis, worked in a special division responsible for
identifying fraud. For more than five years Davis and her conspirators ran
a “sprawling fraud and bribery scheme that generated over $66 million”
in unauthorized food stamp transactions, according to the Department of
Justice (DOJ). The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) found that Davis
abused her position and privileged access to confidential government
databases to help the others in the ring embezzle food stamp benefits by
driving tens of millions of dollars in phony transactions. The disgraced
USDA veteran and her accomplices were recently charged with conspiracy to
steal government funds and misappropriate USDA benefits and Davis was
additionally charged with bribery and honest services fraud.
With
SNAP fraud at an all-time high the USDA launched a special
system last year to facilitate the replacement of
the welfare benefit when recipients claim it stolen. In the program’s
first two years the government doled out a hefty $61.5 million to replace
pilfered food stamps in 127,290 cases. That figure has since increased to a
whopping $102,425,077 to
replace 226,196 of the 691,604 benefits reported stolen, according to the
latest figures published in the SNAP
Replacement of Stolen Benefits Dashboard. Recipients in practically
every state have submitted claims with New York leading the pack at 33,468,
followed by California (32,258), Alabama (26,919) and Oklahoma (21,553).
The new $5 million fraud framework is expected to drastically cut down on
those figures.
Unprepared Border Patrol
Released Aliens from Terrorist Nation
The aliens
pouring over our border under the Biden
administration weren’t all innocent Mexican families, as our
Corruption Chronicles blog reports,
many were threats to our national security:
Federal
agents at one of the nation’s busiest border crossings failed to screen
illegal immigrants from a country that poses a security threat to the
United States as record numbers of the Special Interest Aliens (SIAs)
poured in through its California sector. The SIAs—identified by the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as foreign nationals originating from
countries with possible or established links to terrorism—from Central
Asia were being smuggled into
the U.S. through Mexico in record numbers yet Border Patrol agents in San
Diego did not have a process for identifying or vetting them like their
counterparts in other southwest border sectors during an unprecedented
illegal immigration crisis. The lapse resulted in missed opportunities to
identify aliens who posed a potential risk to national security and to
collect information about smuggling networks, according to a report made
public—with extensive redactions—this month by the DHS Inspector
General.
The watchdog reveals that Customs and Border Protection
(CBP) agents encountered
more than a fourfold increase of SIAs from one Central Asian country with
known terrorist ties, from approximately 3,000 in fiscal year 2022 to an
alarming 13,000 in 2023, yet the frontline DHS agency did not have a
consistent mechanism to identify and provide additional screening of the
potentially dangerous migrants. The specific country is redacted throughout
the lengthy DHS report but it is likely Uzbekistan, a Muslim former Soviet
nation that the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) confirms is home to a number of renowned
terrorist groups including Islamic Jihad Union (IJU), Islamic Movement of
Uzbekistan (IMU),
Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham-Khorasan (ISIS-K). “According to CBP,
smuggling networks scheduled aliens’ flights to Latin America, and then
organized their travel by land through Baja California, Mexico,” the DHS
IG report states. “Subsequently aliens often arrived at the U.S. border
in San Diego and nearby areas.” Many scheduled appointments with the
Biden administration’s disastrous CBP One App, which released hundreds of
thousands of otherwise inadmissible illegal immigrants into the U.S.,
including those from hostile
nations.
The probe
found that because CBP did not have an agency-wide policy to identify
aliens from certain countries as SIAs, thousands of illegal immigrants from
nations with links to terrorism entered at least one region that did not
provide additional screening. The biggest offender was the then highly
transited San Diego sector, where authorities estimate 65% of SIAs from the
unnamed Central Asian nation with terrorist ties entered the U.S. during
the first half of 2023 alone. The abrupt surge caused alarm among CBP
officials who expressed concerns that smuggling networks responsible for
the increase of migration could pose a national security threat, the DHS
watchdog report reveals. The probe focuses on this narrow period of the
Biden administration’s years-long open border disaster that welcomed a
ghastly 7.6 million illegal immigrants, including hundreds of thousands
with serious criminal records. By the time the SIA lapse was exposed in
July
2023, the problem was out of control. San Diego Border Patrol task force
agents (TFOs) assigned to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI)
Joint Terrorism Task Force requested that frontline officers screen SIAs,
but that did not occur. “Agents told us there were too many aliens in
custody matching TFOs’ requests to interview before releasing them,”
the report says.
The terrorist
threat to the U.S. skyrocketed under the dangerous Biden-Harris open
border policies with more than 1.7 million illegal immigrants from
countries that DHS determined pose a national security threat to the United
States entering the country
and dozens that appear on the terrorist watchlist released into American
communities. SIAs came from some 26 nations, including Afghanistan, Cuba,
Iran, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria, Syria, and Turkey, China, North Korea,
Kyrgyzstan, Mauritania, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Venezuela. Afghan
Mohammad Kharwin is an example of a terrorist released in the U.S. after
getting arrested by Border Patrol near Imperial Beach, California in early
2023. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) placed him on its
non-detained docket along with millions of other illegal aliens and
instructed him to report to an ICE office in Sacramento, California even
though he is a member of Hezb-e-Islami, a group responsible for attacks in
Afghanistan that killed at least nine American soldiers and civilians from
2013 to 2015.
Until Next Week...
