Justice Department Appointees Halted Inquiry Into Gentile Commutation
The decision has stoked concerns about prosecutorial independence after reporting that intermediaries discussed large payments to secure the clemency.
Overview
- Sunday reporting said federal prosecutors in Brooklyn opened an early-stage criminal probe into how David Gentile’s commutation was obtained and that the inquiry was later stopped by Trump appointees.
- Investigators reportedly collected jailhouse communications in which Gentile discussed payments of about $2.5 million or more to people or companies to help obtain clemency.
- Sources named intermediaries, including the Rev. Frank Mann, as part of conversations about lobbying the president, and Mann has denied involvement to reporters.
- The Justice Department defended its actions through spokeswoman Natalie Baldassarre, saying prosecutors acted within enforcement priorities and that procedures were followed.
- The reporting ties the Gentile case to earlier coverage of a broader pardon-intermediary practice and could prompt renewed calls for oversight over how clemency requests are handled and who gains access to the president.