克林顿任命法官无限期叫停特朗普17.76亿美元反武器化基金


2026年6月12日 美国东部时间下午4:55 / 福克斯新闻

布林克马法官表示,在特朗普表示对该基金未能推进感到失望后,公开保证已不足以让人放心
作者:伊莱恩·马伦 福克斯新闻

发布时间:2026年6月12日 美国东部时间下午4:55 | 更新时间:2026年6月12日 美国东部时间下午6:43

托德·布兰奇称司法部不会推进反武器化基金

代理司法部长托德·布兰奇对议员表示,司法部已放弃反武器化基金计划,在一名联邦法官临时叫停该基金设立后,这一努力就此告终。

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一名联邦法官周五无限期叫停特朗普政府177.6亿美元的反武器化基金,而本周早些时候另一名联邦法官在司法部表示该基金不再推进后拒绝介入。

这场法庭纠纷加大了要求政府正式解散该基金的压力。尽管副司法部长托德·布兰奇对国会表示该基金不会推进,但设立该基金的和解协议和部门指令尚未正式撤销。批评人士认为,这仍为该基金未来仍有可能启动留下了空间。

美国地区法官利奥妮·布林克马是克林顿任命的法官,她周五延长了法院禁令,阻止该基金实施,认定政府官员的公开保证不足以消除人们对该基金未来可能恢复的担忧。

布林克马指出,特朗普“表示对某件事未能推进感到失望”,并称这表明该基金未来可能会“死灰复燃”。

法官临时叫停特朗普司法部近20亿美元“反武器化基金”

2026年6月3日,华盛顿特区白宫椭圆形办公室,唐纳德·特朗普总统在活动中签署行政命令。(凯文·迪奇/盖蒂图片社摄)

上周末,特朗普在《与媒体见面》节目中表示,他希望继续推进该基金。

“如果由我决定,我会付给他们应得的报酬。人们已经被毁掉了。生活已经被毁掉了,”特朗普说。

布林克马给司法部一周时间,书面确认反武器化基金正在终止且不会恢复。

此次裁决出台数天前,美国地区法官理查德·伦驳回了“华盛顿责任与道德公民”(CREW)提出的紧急干预请求,他表示愿意依赖司法部关于该基金已被实际放弃的声明。

代理司法部长布兰奇在众议院议员压力下披露特朗普“反武器化基金”的命运

但由乔治·W·布什任命的法官伦同时警告政府官员,不要将他的裁决视为重启该项目的许可。

“我在此警告司法部:别跟我耍花招,”伦在法庭上说。

布兰奇在本月早些时候的一场听证会上宣布,反武器化基金——源于唐纳德·特朗普总统与美国国税局的诉讼和解——将不会推进。该基金旨在补偿所谓的政府“法律战”受害者,但它的设立立即引发了民主党人的强烈反对,他们将其描述为“贿赂基金”,最终可能会惠及特朗普的政治盟友以及1月6日国会山骚乱的被控人员。

特朗普政府回击针对反武器化基金的“贿赂基金”指控,并列出合格受益人

档案照片:代理美国司法部长托德·布兰奇被要求为买家获取赦免证书。(安德鲁·哈恩/盖蒂图片社摄)

司法部律师安德鲁·布洛克在伦面前辩称,布兰奇在国会的证词实际上使得CREW的挑战失去了意义,因为政府已公开承诺不会推进该基金。

伦多次质疑为何布兰奇没有正式撤销5月18日首次确立该基金设立程序的命令,布洛克无法回答这一问题。

CREW律师尼基尔·萨斯辩称,设立该基金的和解协议在法律上仍然有效,且包含需要采取行动的临近截止日期。

难比登天:国会为何可能阻挠17亿美元赔偿基金

2026年6月2日,华盛顿特区雷伯恩众议院办公大楼,代理美国司法部长托德·布兰奇在众议院拨款小组委员会听证会上作证。(安德鲁·哈恩/盖蒂图片社摄)

据萨斯称,监督该基金的五人委员会必须在6月17日前成立,而资金转移计划在7月17日前完成。

“从纸面来看,该基金仍是一个合法运作的实体,”萨斯辩称。

然而,伦最终暂时接受了政府关于该基金已无实际意义的说法,但他指出,他可以对向法院作出虚假陈述的律师进行处罚。

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他还表示,将继续审议CREW提出的初步禁令请求,并暗示如果有证据表明政府试图重启该基金,他可以介入。

伊莱恩·马伦是福克斯新闻数字频道和福克斯商业频道的撰稿人,报道全国政治。

Clinton judge indefinitely blocks Trump’s $1.776B anti-weaponization fund

2026-06-12 4:55pm EDT / Fox News

Judge Brinkema said public assurances were insufficient after Trump expressed disappointment the fund wasn’t moving forward

By Elaine Mallon, Fox News

Published June 12, 2026 4:55pm EDT | Updated June 12, 2026 6:43pm EDT

Todd Blanche says DOJ will not move forward with Anti-Weaponization Fund

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawmakers the Justice Department is abandoning plans for the Anti-Weaponization Fund, ending the effort after a federal judge temporarily blocked its creation.

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A federal judge on Friday indefinitely blocked the Trump administration’s $1.776 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund, even as another federal judge earlier this week declined to intervene after the Justice Department said the fund was no longer moving forward.

The court disputes have heightened pressure on the administration to formally dismantle the fund. While Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told Congress the fund would not move forward, the settlement agreement and departmental directives that created the fund have not been formally rescinded. Critics argue this leaves open the possibility that the fund could still proceed in the future.

U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, a Clinton-appointed judge, extended a court order Friday preventing implementation of the fund, concluding that public assurances from administration officials were insufficient to eliminate concerns that it could later be revived.

Brinkema noted how Trump, “says he’s disappointed that something is not going forward,” suggesting this was evidence that the fund may “rear its head” at some point in the future.

JUDGE TEMPORARILY BLOCKS TRUMP DOJ’S NEARLY $2B ‘ANTI-WEAPONIZATION’ FUND

President Donald Trump signs an executive order during an event in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on June 3, 2026.(Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Over the weekend Trump shared on “Meet the Press” that he’d like to continue with the fund.

“If it was up to me, I’d pay them the kind of money that they deserve. People have been destroyed. Lives have been destroyed,” Trump said.

Brinkema gave the Justice Department a week to put in writing that the Anti-Weaponization Fund is being terminated and will not be reinstated.

The ruling comes days after U.S. District Judge Richard Leon rejected a separate request from Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) seeking emergency intervention, saying he was willing to rely on Justice Department representations that the fund had effectively been abandoned.

ACTING AG BLANCHE REVEALS FATE OF TRUMP’S ‘ANTI-WEAPONIZATION FUND’ UNDER PRESSURE FROM HOUSE LAWMAKERS

But Leon, a George W. Bush-appointed judge, simultaneously warned administration officials not to treat his decision as permission to revive the program.

“I give the Justice Department this warning: Don’t play possum with me,” Leon said from the bench.

Blanche announced during a hearing earlier this month that the Anti-Weaponization Fund, which was born out of President Donald Trump’s lawsuit settlement with the IRS, would not be proceeding. The fund was intended to compensate alleged victims of government “lawfare,” but its creation sparked immediate backlash from Democrats, who characterized it as a “slush fund” that could ultimately benefit Trump’s political allies and individuals charged in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

TRUMP ADMIN PUSHES BACK ON ‘SLUSH FUND’ ATTACKS AGAINST ANTI-WEAPONIZATION FUND AND LAYS OUT WHO QUALIFIES

FILE – Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche was directed to obtain a certificate of pardon for Buyer.(Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Justice Department attorney Andrew Block argued before Leon that Blanche’s congressional testimony effectively mooted CREW’s challenge because the government had publicly committed not to move forward.

Leon repeatedly questioned why Blanche has not formally rescinded a May 18 order that established procedures for the fund in the first place, a question Block could not answer.

CREW attorney Nikhel Sus argued the settlement agreement that established the fund remains legally operative and contains upcoming deadlines requiring action.

WAY HARDER THAN IT SHOULD BE: WHY CONGRESS MAY BALK ON $1.7B COMPENSATION FUND

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche testifies during a House Committee on Appropriations subcommittee hearing in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C., on June 2, 2026.(Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

According to Sus, a five-member board overseeing the fund must be established by June 17, while funding transfers are scheduled by July 17.

“On paper, the fund is still a legally operating entity,” Sus argued.

However, Leon ultimately accepted the government’s assurances for now that the fund is moot, but he noted that he can sanction attorneys who make false representations to the court.

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He also indicated he will continue considering CREW’s request for a preliminary injunction and suggested he could intervene if evidence emerges that the administration is attempting to revive the fund.

Elaine Mallon is a writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business covering national politics.

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