Justice
Dept. Admits
Criminal Investigation of USADF in Judicial Watch FOIA
Case
After years of
whistleblowing by Judicial Watch clients Jasmine Battle and Mateo Dunne,
the U.S. Department of Justice publicly announced an
ongoing criminal investigation of the U.S. African Development
Foundation (USADF).
The news came in a status conference hearing in our Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) lawsuit.
In August last year we sued
the U.S. African Development Foundation (USADF)
after it failed to respond to a July 2025 FOIA request for records of its
expenditures and deposits related to allegations of waste, fraud, and abuse
committed by senior officials, contractors, and grantees.
We also
wanted records regarding its retaliation against whistleblowers and its
attempt to block Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) audits (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. African Development
Foundation (No. 1:25-cv-02623)).
An
independent agency,
the foundation was created in 1980 to provide development assistance to
underserved and marginalized populations in conflict and post-conflict
areas in Africa.
The Justice Department said at the hearing in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia that it would immediately
begin producing documents related to those allegations with some
redactions.
Mateo Dunne became general counsel of the foundation in
October 2021 following a distinguished legal career in both private
practice and public service. Jasmine Battle, an accomplished administrative
professional, became executive assistant to the agency’s president and
CEO in March 2022. Together, they raised internal alarms regarding
misconduct and ultimately became whistleblowers after facing resistance and
retaliation.
Battle and Dunne pursued every lawful avenue to expose
corruption at USADF, including providing information to the U.S. Senate.
Their disclosures resulted in a formal letter from Senator James E. Risch,
Ranking
Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, requesting an
investigation into the agency.
As Senator Risch wrote
in November 2023:
According to whistleblower complaints
received by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC)—complaints that
I understand have also been shared with the [Office of Inspector
General]—current President and CEO Travis Adkins, former President and
CEO C.D. Glin, Managing Director for Finance and Administration Mathieu
Zahui, Chief Program Officer and former Acting President and CEO Elisabeth
Feleke, and Chairman of the Board of Directors Jack Leslie are aware of,
and may be
complicit in, corrupt and potentially unlawful practices
…
The whistleblower allegations that Senator Risch
brought to light included misuse of official funds, conflict of interest
and inappropriate partnerships, discriminatory employment practices, and
retaliation against employees who dared to raise questions about this
misconduct.
For years, Battle and Dunne cooperated with law
enforcement, including the Department of Justice, resulting in the public
announcement of an ongoing criminal investigation. For speaking out against
a corrupt agency, they have been retaliated against, mistreated, and
maligned. The systems that were created to protect them as whistleblowers,
like the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Office of
Inspector General, the Office of Special Counsel, and the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, have thus far failed them. This news of Justice
Department involvement is
vindication for the years they’ve spent exposing government
corruption.
Maryland Democrats
Still Trying to Gerrymander Congressional
Districts
You almost have to admire Maryland Democrats
for their foolhardy persistence.
Our analysis of a Democrat-proposed
2026
congressional redistricting plan for Maryland shows that it is in key
respects identical to the unconstitutional gerrymander struck down in a
prior Judicial Watch lawsuit—but
is even more partisan and less compact than the invalidated 2021
map.
The proposed 2026 plan re-creates the same distorted
configuration rejected by Judge Lynne A. Battaglia for Maryland’s First
Congressional District, which shares 97 percent of the geographic area of
the unconstitutional 2021 district. As before, the district again crosses
the Chesapeake Bay Bridge to link disparate regions—an arrangement the
court previously found unlawful.
Our analysis also found that the
proposed 2026 plan is less compact than both prior maps under all three
compactness
measures relied upon by Battaglia in invalidating the 2021 plan—directly
violating the Maryland Constitution’s compactness
requirement.
Additionally, the proposed redraw substantially
increases county and municipal splits compared to the 2022 remedial
map—another factor Battaglia cited in concluding the 2021 plan was an
unconstitutional partisan gerrymander.
Using the widely accepted efficiency
gap metric, we determined that the proposed 2026 map is more partisan
than both the 2021 map struck down as unconstitutional and the current 2022
remedial map now in effect.
We ascertained that the boundaries of
Congressional Districts 2, 3, and 7 in Baltimore City closely track racial
demographics, raising serious concerns about impermissible race-based
districting.
Maryland is currently operating under a congressional
map adopted in 2022, following our successful lawsuit
on behalf of 12 registered Maryland voters. That suit challenged the
state’s 2021 redistricting plan as an unconstitutional partisan
gerrymander that diluted voters’
rights.
The current
redistricting
effort began in August after Governor Wes Moore suggested revisiting
the state’s map amid national redistricting disputes. Republicans have
warned that the proposal is designed to eliminate Maryland’s lone
Republican member of Congress, Rep. Andy Harris—by resurrecting the same
district configuration already ruled unconstitutional.
This is a
rerun of an unlawful gerrymander that a court already threw out. Maryland
Democrats appear determined to entrench partisan power at the expense of
constitutional limits and voters’ rights. We are watching these
developments closely.
We are a national leader in election integrity
and voting rights litigation, with a record of successful
lawsuits enforcing constitutional redistricting standards and cleaning
voter rolls nationwide.
Our election law efforts are led by Senior
Attorney Robert Popper, who previously served in the Voting Section of the
Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, where he managed voting
rights investigations and litigation across dozens of states.
In
January 2026, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled 7–2 in
favor of granting standing in a historic case we filed on behalf of
Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors. The case challenges an
Illinois law allowing the counting of ballots received up to 14 days after
Election Day.
In November 2025, the Supreme Court granted
review in a
landmark election integrity case we brought on behalf of the Libertarian
Party of Mississippi. The case seeks to uphold a ruling by the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which struck down a Mississippi law
unconstitutionally allowing election officials to count mail-in ballots
received up to five days after Election Day.
Federal courts in Oregon,
California
and Illinois have ruled that Judicial Watch’s lawsuits against those
states to force them to clean their voter rolls may proceed.
We announced
in May 2025 that our work led to the removal of more than five million
ineligible
names from voter rolls nationwide.
Judicial Watch
Sues ODNI for Records on China Corruption Report
In March
2025, after more than a year of delays and repeated pressure from
lawmakers, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)
finally released a congressionally mandated unclassified report on the
wealth and corrupt activities of Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
leadership.
To try to understand what was going on, we filed a
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
against the Office of the Director of National Intelligence for records of
its preparation of the
report (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (No.
1:26-cv-00199)).
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia after the Director of National Intelligence failed to respond
to a March 7, 2025, FOIA request for:
- All records
relied upon during ODNI’s preparation of its report regarding the wealth
and corrupt activities of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). For purposes
of clarification, the report was mandated by Sec. 6501 of the James M.
Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (P.L.
117-263).
- All
communications between ODNI personnel involved in the preparation of the
report and any official or employee of the Department of State regarding
the report, or its submission to Congress.
- All communications
between ODNI personnel involved in the preparation of the report and the
Executive Office of the President regarding the report, or its submission
to Congress.
The 2022
legislation mandating the report gave a deadline of December
2023.
In June 2024, China was reported to have lobbied
strongly against the report’s release. The report was not delivered
until March 2025 – after Donald Trump had become president and a new
director of national
intelligence was in place.
The seven-page report,
titled “Wealth and Corrupt Activities of the Leadership of the Chinese
Communist Party,” states:
Corruption is an endemic
feature of and challenge for China, enabled by a political system with
power highly centralized in the hands of the CCP, a CCP-centric concept of
the rule of law, a lack of independent checks on public officials, and
limited transparency.
***
Corruption within China is primarily
due to structural features that centralize power, eschew
independent checks or accountability—especially at the provincial
level—and produce perverse incentives for political advancement and
financial enrichment.
There is heavy resistance to
transparency when it comes to what the Deep State knows about the Chinese
Communist Party. The long delay of this intelligence report on China’s
corruption and systemic graft reflects poorly on the Biden-era intelligence
community.
We have reported extensively on China’s influence in the
United States.
In November 2025, we sued
the U.S. Department of Education for records on the University of
Michigan’s connections to
China, including related communications with the U.S. Department of
Justice.
In July 2025, we received records
from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security about Gov. Tim Walz’s
connections to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). A DHS and FBI
counter-intelligence investigation into Walz’s CCP connections determined
that “China [was] happy” with Walz being selected as Kamala Harris’s
running mate on the 2024 Democratic presidential ticket. Walz’s
connections to the CCP were extensive and a concern to the intelligence
community, according to the documents produced.
In July 2024, we sued
the U.S. Department of Treasury for records of communication between the
Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) regarding the purchase of U.S. farmland by
foreign entities, including China and other foreign powers.
Our
investigations and FOIA lawsuits uncovered much is publicly known about
Covid-19’s connections
with China, including FBI
records released in April 2024 referencing an April 2020 email exchange
with several officials in the bureau’s Newark Field Office referring to
Dr. Anthony Fauci’s National Institute of Allergies and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID) grant to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in China as
including “gain-of-function
research” which “would leave no signature of purposeful human
manipulation.”
Judicial Watch
Urges Justice Dept. to Investigate Florida County for Woke Quota
Scheme
The Board of County Commissioners in
Hillsborough County, Florida, created a Diversity Advisory Council – and
they decided to staff it on the basis of race, sexual preference, gender
identity, and disability.
We have submitted a
formal request to the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division
for an investigation of this scheme. This woke racism and sexism is a
textbook
violation of the Constitution. Government bodies exist to serve all
citizens equally—not to segregate Americans into woke identity groups.
The Trump Justice Department should take action.
In the letter sent
to Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon, we assert that
Hillsborough County’s Diversity Advisory Council violates the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment:
Judicial
Watch requests the Office of Civil Rights investigate Hillsborough County,
Florida’s Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) for its use of race,
sexual preference, gender identity, and disability to appoint members to
its Diversity Advisory Council. This practice violates the equal protection
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution.
The [Commissioners] created
the Diversity Advisory Council as a governmental body structured around
explicit identity-based
classifications.
The Diversity Advisory Council is
explicitly structured around identity classifications, requiring
representation from specific racial, ethnic, sexual orientation, and
disability groups. Council members are appointed in fixed numbers by
identity category, with vacancies filled group-by-group rather than through
a race-neutral or merit-based process.
In addition to arguing that
the appointment process violates racial and sex discrimination law, we
argue that the Diversity Advisory Council’s structure rests on
impermissible stereotyping rejected by the Supreme Court, assuming
individuals’ viewpoints are defined by their sex or gender
identity:
[T]he criteria sort applicants into preferred
identity groups without any meaningful connection to the substance of the
advice sought. Such arbitrary distinctions, untethered to any legitimate
government objective… therefore violate the
equal protection clause.
We previously submitted public
records requests in June and December 2025 for documents related to the
Commissioners’ use of these unconstitutional eligibility criteria and now
urge the Justice Department “to open a formal investigation into
Hillsborough County’s Board of County Commissioners and take appropriate
remedial actions.”
We frequently go to court to argue against
unconstitutional diversity practices.
In May 2025, we uncovered records
from the U.S. Military Academy West Point, revealing that speakers at the
March 2024 “Founders
Day” event were instructed to “AVOID saying
‘removed,’ ‘replaced,’ ‘deleted’ [when referring to the new
mission statement] – just refer to the ‘updated mission statement and
reinforce that the motto remains unchanged.” [Emphasis in original] The
records also tied Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) efforts to the
mission statement controversy.
In January 2025, the City of San
Francisco, CA, in a 7-3 vote by the Board of Supervisors of the City and
County of San Francisco, authorized a settlement
agreement in a taxpayer lawsuit we brought against the City, agreeing
to discontinue its discriminatory guaranteed-income program funded by
taxpayer money in favor of transgender individuals with a preference for
biological black and Latino men who identify as women. The agreement
commits the city to pay $3,250 in attorney fees and costs and not to create
a new guaranteed income program with the same eligibility
criteria.
In November 2024, we filed a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) lawsuit against
the U.S. Department of War for information regarding the rebranding of West
Point’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) office to “Office of
Engagement and Retention.”
In July 2023, we exposed records
from the U.S. Air Force Academy, a
component of the War Department, which included instructional materials and
emails that addressed topics such as Critical Race Theory, “white
privilege,” and Black Lives Matter.
In March 2023, records from
the War Department showed the Air Force Academy had made race and gender
instruction a top priority in the training of
cadets.
Until next week,
