更新于:2026年3月10日 / 美国东部时间上午11:10 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
周二公布的法庭文件显示,华盛顿特区负责监督律师不当行为的机构已对司法部特赦律师埃德·马丁提起道德指控。此前,马丁在担任临时美国检察官期间,于去年向乔治城大学法学院发送了一封威胁信件,质疑该校的多元化和包容性政策。
在2月17日给法学院的信中,马丁告诉校方官员,一名举报人声称乔治城大学在教授多元化与包容性(DEI)相关内容,并询问了这一做法。在未等待回应的情况下,他告知学校,他正通过指示其办公室工作人员不雇佣该校任何学生担任研究员、实习生或美国检察官办公室(华盛顿特区)雇员的方式实施制裁。
对此,该校时任院长威廉·特雷诺(William Treanor)告诉马丁——后者是一名虔诚的天主教徒——他的信件“构成了对该校作为耶稣会和天主教机构使命的攻击”。
在周五提交给华盛顿特区上诉法院专业责任委员会并于周二公开的文件中,华盛顿特区律师协会纪律顾问汉密尔顿·“菲尔”·福克斯三世(Hamilton “Phil” Fox III)指控马丁作为政府官员,通过要求法学院改变其教学内容和教学方式,违反了美国宪法第一修正案和第五修正案。
法庭文件称:“他以官方身份行事并代表政府,使用胁迫手段惩罚或压制一种不受欢迎的观点——即多元化与包容性(DEI)的教学和推广。他要求乔治城法学院放弃其言论自由和宗教权利,以换取就业机会。”
司法部在一份声明中指责华盛顿特区律师协会是一个有党派倾向的组织。
声明称:“华盛顿特区律师协会试图针对和惩罚那些为特朗普总统服务的人,却拒绝调查或处理拜登和奥巴马政府时期的律师所犯下的实际道德违规行为,这清楚地表明了这个有党派倾向的组织的议程。”
马丁未立即回应置评请求,其律师也无法立即取得联系。
马丁在联邦检察官办公室的短暂任期充满争议,很大程度上是因为他此前曾支持2021年1月6日冲击国会大厦的暴徒。
他在特朗普总统上任后开始担任该职位,并向所有参与袭击的人发布了全面赦免令。他还主持了多次解雇和解职行动,多次违反司法部规范,向国会议员和其他机构(包括乔治城大学)发送威胁信件。
在明确无法在共和党控制的参议院获得足够确认票数后,马丁被让娜·皮罗(Jeanine Pirro)取代为联邦检察官,并在司法部获得其他职位,包括特赦律师和总检察长帕姆·邦迪(Pam Bondi)武器化工作组主任。
在离开美国检察官办公室之际,他向全体员工宣布自己正受到华盛顿特区纪律顾问办公室的调查,但未详细说明调查细节。
针对马丁的投诉暗示了他在此事件中采取的行动。文件指出,当纪律顾问办公室最初在去年4月收到针对他的投诉并要求正式回应时,马丁拒绝回应,反而向首席法官和华盛顿特区上诉法院的资深法官发送了一份单方面信函。
投诉称:“在那封信中,他表示不会回应纪律顾问的询问,抱怨纪律顾问的‘行为不公’,并请求‘与你们所有人进行面对面会议,讨论此事并找到前进的道路’。”文件还补充说,马丁还抄送了白宫法律顾问办公室。
尽管首席法官告知马丁,单方面与他会面(即未告知对方)是不合适的,他必须通过常规法律程序与华盛顿特区纪律顾问办公室沟通,但投诉称他仍多次联系法官抱怨调查。
在一封信中,他写道,法官不仅应该“立即暂停福克斯先生以调查其行为”,还应该“因他的偏见行为驳回对我的指控”。
由于他与法官的沟通以及要求驳回案件,马丁现在还面临在诉讼期间与法官进行单方面沟通的指控,以及从事严重妨碍司法公正的行为。
哥伦比亚广播公司新闻今年早些时候曾报道,马丁此后已被剥夺主持司法部武器化工作组的头衔,但他仍以特赦律师身份留在司法部。
他此前还曾担任美国检察官特别助理,负责调查针对公职人员的抵押贷款欺诈指控。
其中一个目标是纽约州总检察长莱蒂蒂亚·詹姆斯(Letitia James),后者后来被司法部起诉,但在联邦法官裁定弗吉尼亚州东区的临时美国检察官非法任命导致起诉无效后,该案件被驳回。
詹姆斯的律师阿贝·洛厄尔(Abbe Lowell)在社交媒体上分享了马丁在调查期间站在她一处房产外的照片后,公开指控马丁在此案中存在不当行为。
DOJ’s Ed Martin faces ethics charges from disciplinary office over threatening letter to Georgetown University
Updated on: March 10, 2026 / 11:10 AM EDT / CBS News
The office that polices attorney misconduct in Washington, D.C., has filed ethics charges against Justice Department pardon attorney Ed Martin, after Martin last year sent a threatening letter to the Georgetown University Law Center that raised questions about its diversity and inclusion policies while he was serving as interim U.S. attorney, according to court filings made public Tuesday.
In a Feb. 17 letter to the law school, Martin told university officials that a whistleblower claimed Georgetown was teaching DEI and asked about the practice. Without waiting for a response, he told the school he was imposing sanctions by instructing his office staff not to employ any students from the school as fellows, interns or employees at the U.S. attorney’s office in Washington, D.C.
In response, the school’s now-former dean, William Treanor, told Martin, who is a devout Catholic, that his letter represented “an attack on the University’s mission as a Jesuit and Catholic institution.”
In filings made in the D.C. Court of Appeals’ Board on Professional Responsibility dated Friday and made public on Tuesday, Disciplinary Counsel Hamilton “Phil” Fox III of the D.C. Bar alleged that Martin’s conduct as a government official violated the First and Fifth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution by making demands that the law school change what it teaches students and how it teaches them.
“Acting in his official capacity and speaking on behalf of the government, he used coercion to punish or suppress a disfavored viewpoint, the teaching and promotion of DEI,” the court filing says. “He demanded that Georgetown Law relinquish its free speech and religious rights in order to obtain a benefit, employment opportunities for its students.”
In a statement, the Justice Department accused the D.C. Bar of being a partisan organization.
“The DC bar’s attempt to target and punish those serving President Trump while refusing to investigate or act against actual ethical violations that were committed by Biden and Obama administration attorneys is a clear indication of this partisan organization’s agenda,” the statement said.
Ed Martin speaks at an event hosted by then-Rep. Matt Gaetz at the Capitol in Washington, June 13, 2023. AP Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades
Martin did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and an attorney for Martin could not be immediately reached.
Martin’s brief tenure at the U.S. attorney’s office was riddled with controversy, in large part over his prior involvement with advocating for the rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
He started the role as President Trump took office and issued sweeping pardons to all of those who participated in the attack. He also presided over firings, demotions and violated Justice Department norms repeatedly by sending threatening letters to members of Congress and other institutions, including Georgetown.
After it became clear he could not win enough votes for confirmation in the Republican-controlled Senate, Martin was replaced as U.S. attorney by Jeanine Pirro and given other jobs at the department, including pardon attorney and chief of Attorney General Pam Bondi’s Weaponization Working Group.
On his way out the door from the U.S. attorney’s office, he announced to his entire staff that he was under investigation by the D.C. Office of Disciplinary Counsel without elaborating on the details.
The complaint against Martin alludes to actions he took in connection with that incident. It noted that when the Office of Disciplinary Counsel initially received a complaint against him last April and asked for a formal response, Martin refused to engage and instead sent an ex-parte letter to the chief judge and the senior judges of the D.C. Court of Appeals.
“In that letter, he stated that he would not be responding to Disciplinary Counsel’s inquiry, complained about Disciplinary Counsel’s ‘uneven behavior,’ and requested a ‘face-to-face meeting with all of you to discuss this matter and find a way forward,’” the complaint said, adding that Martin had also copied the White House counsel’s office.
Although the chief judge told Martin it was improper to meet with him ex parte — that is, without the knowledge of the other party — and that he had to communicate with the D.C. Office of Disciplinary Counsel through the usual legal process, he repeatedly contacted the judge to complain about the investigation, the complaint alleges.
In one letter, he wrote that the judge should “not only suspend Mr. Fox immediately to investigate his conduct” but should also move to “dismiss the case against me because of his prejudicial conduct.”
Because of his communications with the judge and requests to dismiss the case, Martin is now also facing charges of improperly communicating ex parte with a judge during a proceeding, and engaging in conduct that seriously interferes with the administration of justice.
CBS News previously reported earlier this year that Martin has since been stripped of his title presiding over the Justice Department’s Weaponization Working Group, but he remains on staff at department as its pardon attorney.
He also previously served as a special assistant U.S. attorney tasked with helping investigate allegations of mortgage fraud against public officials.
One of the targets, New York Attorney General Letitia James, was later charged by the Justice Department in a case that was dismissed after a federal judge determined the interim U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia who secured the indictment had been unlawfully appointed.
James’ attorney, Abbe Lowell, has publicly accused Martin of misconduct in that case, after he was photographed standing outside one of her properties during the investigation and shared the images on social media.
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