美国司法部拒绝法官要求 明确“反武器化”基金已正式终止


2026-06-19T14:35:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

华盛顿——特朗普政府周五拒绝提交由代理司法部长托德·布兰奇和财政部长斯科特·贝森特签署的法庭声明,重申政府不会继续推进这项备受争议的18亿美元“反武器化”基金,并称法官要求提交此类文件“毫无必要”。

司法部高级律师在给弗吉尼亚州亚历山大市联邦地区法院的通知中,驳回了美国地区法官利奥妮·布林克马要求布兰奇、贝森特和副司法部长斯坦利·伍德沃德提交声明的请求。

布林克马上周表示,“为避免进一步诉讼”,这些高级官员应提交一份在伪证处罚下生效的声明,证明“反武器化”项目“无论以任何方式、任何名义”都不会推进。她还发布了初步禁令,禁止司法部采取任何行动创建或运营该项目,但该项目目前仍处于存续状态。

法官警告称,如果政府拒绝提交声明,由两家非营利组织和一名前联邦检察官组成的联盟提起的诉讼将继续推进。

在通知中,伍德沃德的高级顾问安德鲁·布洛克表示,提交此类声明“毫无必要,强迫行政部门高级官员作证涉及严重的三权分立问题”。

他指出,布兰奇此前已在国会作证称该基金“不会推进,就此作罢”,并表示司法部在法庭文件中也做出过类似表述。

“因此,法庭的要求毫无必要,”布洛克写道。“而法庭认为只有强迫三名高级政府官员作证才能解决诉讼僵局的假设,‘涉及三权分立问题’。正如多次说明的那样,该基金不会推进。”

目前尚不清楚布洛克的论点是否足以说服布林克马同意撤销诉讼。

“耐人寻味的是,即便联邦法院给了他们一周时间,代理司法部长和其他政府高级官员仍拒绝在宣誓后明确表示‘黑金基金’已经终止,未来也不会运作,”代表原告的“民主前进”组织主席兼首席执行官斯凯·佩里曼在一份声明中说道。“他们也没有在宣誓后提供任何遵守法院此前指令的相关信息。”

布林克马在上周的听证会结束后,给了特朗普政府澄清该基金状态的机会。布洛克在法庭上辩称,该案应被驳回,因为政府既未设立该基金,也不会推进该项目。

尽管司法部在法庭文件和本月早些时候的国会听证会上都做出了这一表述,但法官指出,这些声明均未在伪证处罚下生效。

这项“反武器化”基金是作为特朗普总统今年1月就前政府承包商泄露其纳税申报单一事起诉国税局的和解协议的一部分设立的。司法部表示,这项17.76亿美元的项目旨在“建立一个系统性程序,受理并纠正那些遭受武器化政治打压和诉讼滥用的人士的诉求”。

但该基金遭到了国会共和党人的强烈反对,他们担忧2021年1月6日国会山骚乱事件的参与者可能获得拨款。

在“反武器化”项目可能阻碍国会共和党移民议程推进后,布兰奇在众议院委员会作证称,司法部“不会推进该基金”。但他拒绝将这一承诺书面化,这使得该基金有可能以其他形式重新启动。

司法部在两起不同法律挑战的法庭文件中也辩称,该项目“尚未设立,且目前不会推进”,并表示相关案件已无实际争议,应完全驳回。政府律师辩称,负责设立和管理该基金的五名成员甚至都尚未任命。

但在上周布林克马主持的听证会上,法官对司法部关于该基金已终止的说法表示怀疑。

布林克马审理的这起案件由一名曾参与2021年国会山骚乱相关案件的前检察官、康涅狄格州纽黑文市以及两个非营利组织——共同事业和全国堕胎联盟联合提起。

针对该基金的其他诉讼已在华盛顿特区和加州提起。在华盛顿一起涉及政府监督组织的案件中,一名联邦法官拒绝暂停该基金的运作。

DOJ rebuffs judge’s demand to state “anti-weaponization” fund is officially dead

2026-06-19T14:35:00-0400 / CBS News

Washington — The Trump administration on Friday declined to submit a declaration in court from Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reiterating that the government is not continuing with a controversial $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund, calling a judge’s demand for such a filing “unnecessary.”

In a notice to the federal district court in Alexandria, Virginia, senior Justice Department lawyers rebuffed U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema’s request for the declaration from Blanche, Bessent and Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward.

Brinkema said last week that “to avoid any further litigation,” the senior officials should file the declaration under penalty of perjury that the “anti-weaponization” program wouldn’t proceed “in any manner, or under any name.” She also granted a preliminary injunction that blocks the Justice Department from taking any action to create or operate the program, which remains in place.

The judge warned that if the administration opted not to file the declaration, the lawsuit brought by a coalition that includes two nonprofits and a former federal prosecutor would move forward.

In the notice, Andrew Block, senior counsel to Woodward, said the declaration is “unnecessary and the compelled testimony of senior officials from the Executive Branch implicates serious separation of powers concerns.”

He noted that Blanche had already testified to Congress that the fund is “not going forward, period,” and said similar assertions have been made in court filings from the Justice Department.

“Accordingly, the Court’s demands are unnecessary,” Block wrote. “And its presumption that mootness can arise only by compelling testimony from three senior government officials ‘implicate[s] separation of powers concerns.’ As stated multiple times, the Fund is not moving forward.”

It’s unclear whether Block’s arguments will be enough to persuade Brinkema to agree that the lawsuit should be dropped.

“It is telling that even after the federal court gave them a week, the Acting Attorney General and other senior administration officials continue to refuse to say under oath that the Slush Fund is dead and won’t operate in the future,” Skye Perryman, president and CEO of Democracy Forward, which is representing the plaintiffs, said in a statement. “Nor have they provided any information under oath about their compliance with the court’s prior directives.”

Brinkema gave the Trump administration the chance to clarify the fund’s status following a hearing last week. Block argued before the court that the case should be dismissed because the administration hadn’t set up the fund and isn’t going ahead with it.

While the Justice Department made that assertion in court filings and to Congress during a hearing earlier this month, the judge noted none of those statements were made under penalty of perjury.

The “anti-weaponization” fund was created as part of a deal to settle a civil lawsuit President Trump filed against the Internal Revenue Service in January over the leak of his tax returns by a former government contractor. The $1.776 billion program aimed to “provide a systematic process to hear and redress claims of others who suffered weaponization and lawfare,” the Justice Department said.

But the funddrew serious backlashfrom Republicans on Capitol Hill, who raised concerns with the possibility that people involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol could receive payouts.

After the “anti-weaponization” program threatened to derail the GOP’s immigration agenda in Congress, Blanche told a House committee that the Justice Department was “not moving forward with the fund.” But he refused to put the commitment in writing, raising the possibility that the fund could be resurrected in another form.

The Justice Department also argued in court papers in two different legal challenges that the program “had not been set up and is now not going forward,” and said the cases are moot and should be dismissed in their entirety. Government lawyers argued that none of the five members who would establish and administer the fund had even been appointed.

But during the hearing before Brinkema last week, the judge expressed skepticism over the Justice Department’s assertion that the fund is dead.

The case before Brinkema was filed by a former prosecutor who worked on cases involving the Jan. 6 attack, as well as the city of New Haven, Connecticut, and two nonprofit groups, Common Cause and the National Abortion Federation.

Other challenges to the fund have been brought in Washington, D.C., and California. In one of the cases in Washington, involving a government watchdog group, a federal judge declined to temporarily halt operation of the fund.

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