⚖️ What’s Happening
- In February 2025, Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove issued an order compelling the dismissal of federal corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, citing that the case impaired Adams’s ability to support the administration’s immigration enforcement priorities
- Instead of complying, seven DOJ prosecutors in key positions—including SDNY Acting U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hagan Scotten, plus the acting heads of the Criminal Division and Public Integrity Section—resigned rather than file the dismissal
- In April, three more prosecutors stepped down after refusing to admit misconduct as a prerequisite for reinstatement, bringing the total resignations to ten
💥 Why It’s Called the “Thursday Night Massacre”
- Legal experts compare this exodus to the 1973 “Saturday Night Massacre”—when President Nixon forced the firing (and subsequent resignations) of top DOJ officials to block the Watergate investigation
- The nickname draws on that historical parallel and the timing—resignations happened midweek, fueling the “Thursday Night” moniker .
🧭 What the Resigners Say
- Danielle Sassoon described the order as “a quid pro quo,” stating Adams was expected to carry out immigration enforcement in exchange for dropped charges Bove promptly accepted her resignation and initiated investigations into those who balked
- Hagan Scotten, a clerks‑turned‑federal prosecutor, wrote: “No system of ordered liberty can allow … dismissing charges … to induce an elected official to support [administration] policy objectives.”
- The other resigning attorneys echoed their ethical conviction: they refused to weaponize the DOJ for political leverage or sacrifice prosecutorial independence
🚨 Immediate and Long-Term Impact
- Corruption Prosecutors Shaken
The DOJ’s Public Integrity Section has been weakened—already down from over 30 lawyers to fewer than five—raising concerns over future capacity to prosecute public corruption - Court Pushback
In April, Judge Dale Ho dismissed the case against Adams with prejudice, sharply criticizing the DOJ’s rationale as “smacks of a bargain”—quid pro quo at its worst - Bigger Trend
This case is emblematic of a broader Trump-era shift: limiting DOJ authority over public corruption and foreign bribery, redirecting enforcement staff, and centralizing control via working groups like the “Weaponization Working Group” - Political and Institutional Fallout
- Critics warn this threatens the DOJ’s role as a neutral enforcer.
- Supporters argue such moves protect against “weaponization” of prosecutorial power by political opponents
🗺️ Why It Matters
Concern | Description |
---|---|
Rule of Law | Prosecutors argue this undercuts legal norms and equal justice—allowing political aims to dictate case outcomes. |
Constitutional Guardrails | The resignations reflect a deeper crisis of independence within the DOJ, echoing Watergate-era resistance. |
Public Trust | Ongoing shake-ups could erode faith in DOJ impartiality, especially if the Public Integrity Section is further weakened. |
🔮 What to Watch
- Investigations: Complaints have been filed with DOJ’s Inspector General and state bar associations regarding Bove’s motives
- Structural Changes: AG Pam Bondi is reportedly considering dissolving the Public Integrity Section entirely—an escalation with huge implications
- Precedent Setting: Will future administrations follow suit, using DOJ prosecutorial levers for political purposes? Or will reforms restore independence?
📝 Bottom Line
The “Thursday Night Massacre” spotlights a critical inflection point in America’s legal system. Dozens of ethical prosecutors resigned rather than surrender independence—drawing stark parallels to Watergate. As the DOJ undergoes sweeping transformations, the outcome will shape how power, policy, and justice intersect in years to come.