Judge Cameron McGowan Currie

Two Hours

Two hours. No press release. No official statement on DOJ.gov. Just a tweet. That’s how the Department of Justice responded to a convicted felon with a website. The Timeline 6:21 AM, December 8, 2025: I publish “Is Todd Blanche Undermining the Letitia James Prosecution?” The article documents 47 unauthorized disclosures from DOJ insiders to nine newsrooms. Six leaks specifically positioning […]

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Obstruction of Justice: How 47 DOJ Leaks and 9 Complicit Newsrooms Targeted the Letitia James Prosecution

The Laundering Pipeline: DOJ Insiders → Reporters → Headlines → Defense Motions → Amicus Briefs → Congressional Letters → Federal Judge’s Ruling Prologue: The Real Misconduct Forty-seven federal crimes. Nine newsrooms. One coordinated operation to obstruct justice. They screamed “prosecutorial misconduct” until a federal judge cited it as fact. But who really obstructed justice in the Letitia James case? Not

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Judge Currie Dismissed the Indictment—But Not Because the Evidence Was Weak

Abbe Lowell filed 50 pages attacking “fringe bloggers” and alleging vindictive prosecution. Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismissed on the Appointments Clause instead—and the dismissal is without prejudice. The evidence remains. DOJ can re-indict tomorrow. The Dismissal That Wasn’t a Victory On November 24, 2025, Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismissed the federal indictment against Letitia James. The case is assigned to

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