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Federal Judge Shuts Down DOJ Subpoenas Against Fed Chair Powell, Calling Investigation a Pretext for Rate Pressure

Last updated: March 13, 2026 10:15 pm
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Federal Judge Shuts Down DOJ Subpoenas Against Fed Chair Powell, Calling Investigation a Pretext for Rate Pressure
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A federal judge blocked DOJ subpoenas against Fed Chair Jerome Powell, ruling the criminal investigation was a pretext to pressure the central bank on interest rates. The decision delivers a major victory for Fed independence, halts the probe, and intensifies the constitutional clash between the Trump administration and the central bank.

A federal judge on Friday blocked subpoenas issued by the U.S. Justice Department as part of its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell‘s handling of renovations of the central bank’s Washington headquarters. The ruling, a significant defeat for the Trump Justice Department, found that the investigation was likely motivated by a desire to pressure the Fed into cutting interest rates or forcing Powell’s resignation. Reuters reported the decision.

Judge blocks subpoenas against Fed Chair Powell; DOJ to appeal

The investigation, which Powell publicly disclosed on January 11, has been portrayed by the Fed chair as a direct threat to the central bank’s political independence. The subpoenas sought information about costly renovations of two historic Fed buildings as well as Powell’s July 2025 testimony before the Senate Banking Committee. The Fed’s Board of Governors moved to quash the subpoenas, arguing they were an unlawful intrusion.

Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg delivered a scathing opinion, concluding the government offered “essentially zero evidence” to suspect Powell of a crime. He wrote that the justifications for the subpoenas were “so thin and unsubstantiated that the Court can only conclude that they are pretextual.” The judge explicitly linked the investigation to President Donald Trump‘s long-standing demand for lower interest rates, noting a “mountain of evidence” suggests the probe’s true purpose was to pressure the Fed chair.

“The Government has offered no evidence whatsoever that Powell committed any crime other than displeasing the President,” Boasberg wrote. In a striking historical analogy, the judge referenced King Henry II’s infamous complaint about Thomas Becket, writing: “The President spent years essentially asking if no one will rid him of this troublesome Fed Chair”—a reference that evoked Becket’s 1170 assassination. This language frames the conflict in the gravest possible historical terms, suggesting executive overreach with potentially dangerous consequences.

The immediate effect of the ruling is to severely restrict the Justice Department’s ability to pursue its case. Prosecutors were examining whether Powell made false statements to Congress and committed fraud, but Boasberg found the subpoenas were issued for an “improper purpose” and thus legally invalid. U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro, a Trump appointee leading the investigation, immediately promised an appeal and told reporters the ruling had effectively granted Powell “immunity.” She argued that her suspicion of a legal violation was sufficient grounds to pursue the case, a stance the judge rejected as insufficient without concrete evidence.

The ruling throws into turmoil Trump’s plan to replace Powell. The president’s nominee, former Fed governor Kevin Warsh, faces a confirmation process that was already contentious. Powell’s term as chair expires in mid-May, but the investigation—and the political firestorm surrounding it—has stalled Warsh’s nomination. Republican Senator Thom Tillis, a member of the Senate Banking Committee, has vowed to block any Fed nominee while the investigation remains open. Tillis stated that an appeal of Friday’s ruling “will only delay the confirmation of Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair,” highlighting how the legal fight directly impacts the central bank’s leadership.

This episode must be understood within the broader context of the Trump administration’s aggressive stance toward the Federal Reserve. Last August, Trump attempted to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, citing unproven mortgage fraud allegations—claims Cook has denied. That move was the first by any president to dismiss a Fed governor since the central bank’s creation in 1913. Cook and her supporters called the allegations a pretext for removing a governor who opposed the president’s monetary policy preferences. The U.S. Supreme Court signaled skepticism toward Trump’s authority to fire Cook during January 21 arguments, though it has not yet issued a final ruling.

Friday’s decision is the latest court setback for the Trump Justice Department as it pursues investigations into political critics and antagonists of the president. In November, a judge dismissed indictments against former FBI chief James Comey and New York state Attorney General Letitia James, both of whom had previously led investigations into Trump. Judge Boasberg alluded to this pattern, writing that being an adversary to Trump “has become risky in recent years.” The ruling underscores a growing judicial recognition of potential weaponization of the Department of Justice for political retribution or policy pressure.

The practical implications are profound. By blocking the subpoenas, the court has reinforced the principle that the Federal Reserve must operate free from criminal investigation intimidation, especially when that investigation appears targeted at influencing monetary policy—an area where the Fed’s independence is considered paramount for economic stability. The decision also strengthens the legal shield around central bank officials from politically motivated prosecutions, though an appeal could ultimately send the case to the Supreme Court, where the justices may have to weigh in on the scope of executive power over independent agencies.

For markets and the economy, the removal of an immediate threat to Powell’s leadership reduces uncertainty. However, the underlying tension between Trump’s demand for lower rates and the Fed’s data-driven approach remains. The nomination battle for the next Fed chair will continue to be a high-stakes political drama, with Tillis’s threat to block any nominee ensuring the Senate confirmation process will be weaponized if the investigation lingers in any form.

The historical echo in Boasberg’s opinion is not an accident. By invoking the Becket affair, the judge warns that presidential frustration with a “troublesome” independent official can escalate beyond legal channels—a lesson from medieval England that remains relevant in modern democracies. This case is no longer just about subpoenas and renovations; it is a defining test of whether the Federal Reserve’s insulation from political pressure will survive the current partisan era.

For now, Jerome Powell holds his position, the investigation is halted, and the Trump administration’s strategy to reshape the Fed through legal intimidation has hit a judicial wall. But the appeal promise and the unresolved Supreme Court question regarding Lisa Cook mean this conflict is far from over. The central bank’s independence has won a critical round, yet the long-term war over its autonomy continues.

This case illustrates why independent institutions matter and how their erosion can occur through seemingly legal means. The judicial pushback offers hope that institutional guardrails still function, but the unprecedented nature of a president using the DOJ to target a Fed chair demands constant vigilance. The stakes extend beyond one central banker to the health of U.S. democratic norms and the credibility of its monetary policy.

For the fastest, most authoritative analysis of breaking news that cuts through the noise, trust onlytrustedinfo.com to deliver the insight you need, when you need it. Our team of senior editors and subject matter experts transforms breaking developments into definitive guides you won’t find elsewhere. Read more of our in-depth coverage to stay ahead of the story.

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