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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMaddowBlog-Why the Justice Department's signing bonuses are so deeply embarrassing
Theres no great mystery as to why the DOJ is left resorting to these humiliating tactics.
Link to tweet
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/why-the-justice-departments-signing-bonuses-are-so-deeply-embarrassing
But making matters even worse is the fact that the flipside is also true: The Justice Department hasnt just lost or ousted too many attorneys its also struggling to replace them. Bloomberg Law reported:
The Justice Department is taking a new tack to overcome hurdles in attracting qualified legal talent and to prevent current lawyers from leaving: offering signing and retention bonuses throughout the Civil Division.
New vacancy postings show signing bonuses of $25,000 are newly available to staff offices investigating youth transgender treatments and litigating the Trump administrations immigration agenda.
.....After this report was published, I heard from some lawyers who were absolutely amazed to learn that conditions are this bad at the DOJ. Bradley P. Moss, a prominent attorney in Washington, D.C., wrote via Bluesky, When I came out of law school in 2006, DOJs prestige was such that liberal and conservative graduates alike would have gladly stepped over their friends dead bodies to get a position there. Trump has ruined it now to the point [the department is] having to bribe new graduates to apply.
In other words, the fact Main Justice has resorted to signing bonuses and retention incentives is profoundly embarrassing for the institution. These developments make it painfully clear that some of the most important and sought-after jobs in American law have become, for all intents and purposes, positions attorneys simply do not want......
As recently as this week, the DOJ had to apologize to a federal judge after the administration pushed false information about her, which came as many federal judges have conceded they can no longer trust claims from the departments lawyers.
The question isnt why lawyers are refusing even to apply for jobs that used to be among the most prestigious in the profession; the question is how long it will take to restore the Justice Department to what it was before Trump and his team decided to corrupt it.
FakeNoose
(42,163 posts)We need to be planning for the post-Chump years because it's going to take a lot of honest lawyers and uncorrupted politicians to fix all the mess these Repukes have done.
Thank you Rachel Maddow for saying the quiet part out loud!
lame54
(40,038 posts)Ocelot II
(131,090 posts)and was pleasantly surprised when I actually got an interview, which went well, but I didn't get the job. Even so, just getting an interview felt like a small professional triumph, since in those days AUSA jobs were in high demand. Now, though, it seems that if you graduate at the bottom of your class from Big Al's Bait Shop and Legal Academy, pass the bar on the fourth try, get turned down by Saul Goodman, and you can't afford to open your own office in the basement of a nail salon in Albuquerque, you apply for an AUSA job under an assumed name and with a paper bag over your head, and they'll probably take you and give you a signing bonus. But who wants the permanent stank of the Trump DoJ on their resume, assuming you even have a law license after doing whatever legal atrocity you are ordered to do?
FakeNoose
(42,163 posts)Assistant US Attorneys used to hold their heads high, and they commanded a lot of respect. We need to get back to that, whatever it takes.