DOJ fails again to get grand jury to indict New York AG Letitia James, a Trump target

C

CNBC Finance

Dec 11, 2025

3 min read

Download Gold Price Tracker & Alerts

Get the app to explore more features and stay updated

Key Points
  • Federal prosecutors again failed to convince a grand jury in Virginia to re-indict New York Attorney General Letitia James on criminal charges.
  • The Department of Justice has tried to obtain an indictment of James over the past two weeks, after a federal judge dismissed the original indictment in the Eastern District of Virginia charging her with bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution in connection with a mortgage.
New York Attorney General Letitia James speaks to the media, after she attended a hearing and pleaded not guilty to charges that she defrauded her mortgage lender, outside the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, in Norfolk, Virginia, U.S., Oct. 24, 2025.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

Federal prosecutors on Thursday for the second time failed to convince a grand jury in Virginia to re-indict New York Attorney General Letitia James on criminal charges, according to multiple reports.

The Department of Justice tried to obtain a new indictment of James over the past two weeks, after a federal judge dismissed the original indictment in the Eastern District of Virginia, charging her with bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution in connection with a mortgage.

It is extremely unusual for a grand jury to refuse to issue an indictment after a prosecutor requests one.

James' indictment and another one in the same district against former FBI Director James Comey were both tossed out after Judge Cameron Currie ruled that Lindsey Halligan, the interim top prosecutor in the Eastern District, had been invalidly appointed to the post.

Halligan has presented the evidence against James and Comey to separate grand juries.

President Donald Trump had called for both James and Comey to be prosecuted. Halligan is his former personal lawyer.

James' defense lawyer, Abbe Lowell, in a statement said, "For the second time in seven days, the Department of Justice has failed in its clear attempt to fulfill President Trump's political vendetta against Attorney General James."

"This unprecedented rejection makes even clearer that this case should never have seen the light of day," Lowell said. "Career prosecutors who knew better refused to bring it, and now two different grand juries in two different cities have refused to allow these baseless charges to be brought."

"This case already has been a stain on this Department's reputation and raises troubling questions about its integrity," he said. "Any further attempt to revive these discredited charges would be a mockery of our system of justice."

CNBC has requested comment from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, which had sought the indictment against James.

The DOJ manual says, "Once a grand jury returns a no-bill or otherwise acts on the merits in declining to return an indictment, the same matter ( i.e., the same transaction or event and the same putative defendant) should not be presented to another grand jury or resubmitted to the same grand jury without first securing the approval of the responsible United States Attorney."

This is developing news. Check back for updates.

Published

December 11, 2025

Thursday at 9:04 PM

Reading Time

3 minutes

~508 words

More Articles

Explore other insights and stories

Jan 20, 2026 CNBC Finance

Another alliance of health care and AI signals why pharma stocks should be back in favor

Bristol Myers Squibb and Microsoft's new partnership aimed at accelerating early detection of lung cancer.

Read Article
Jan 20, 2026 CNBC Finance

Jerome Powell could stay at the Fed even after being removed as chair. Here's what that means

The saga over President Donald Trump's efforts to reshape the Federal Reserve has another twist.

Read Article
Jan 20, 2026 CNBC Finance

Watch: Trump speaks at White House press briefing

President Donald Trump is set to appear at a White House press briefing marking the first anniversary of his second term in office.

Read Article