
President Donald Trumpโs administration could consider criminal charges against U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) staffers following a bombshell investigation by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) that uncovered severe abuses within foreign aid programs.
On Wednesday, Pete Marocco, USAIDโs deputy administrator-designate, briefed members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the ongoing review of the agencyโs spending and operations, conducted under Trumpโs directive.
The Capitol Hill meeting sought to provide lawmakers with an update on the review of foreign aid policies implemented under Trump. During discussions, Marocco suggested that the ongoing investigationโwhich has been shaped by findings from Elon Muskโs DOGE initiativeโcould result in criminal referrals related to misconduct at USAID.
Apparently, thereโs still judicial action that has even come out as late as this morning,โ Rep. Keith Self, (R-TX), who attended the meeting, toldย DailyMailย in an interview. โThey intend to refer USAID officials to DOJ,โ he added, highlighting that fraud โis a criminal act.โ
The congressman stated that Morocco did not rule out the possibility of both USAID employees and grant recipients being implicated in criminal activities.
โIf they are detecting outright fraud, not just bad programs, not just ignoble programs, not just programs that donโt support the national interest of the United States, if theyโre finding fraud, then, absolutelyโ the perpetrators should face prosecution, Self said.
He added that criminal charges would only result from a robust โpaper trailโ of evidence.
โYouโre going to have to have a paper trail to prove that,โ Self added. โAnd I doubt that they would refer anyone without a very strong paper trail.โ
Another person who attended the briefing confirmed the seriousness of the allegations in an interview with DailyMail.com.
โMarocco briefed the full House Foreign Affairs Committee, Democrats and Republicans, that the waste, fraud, and abuse at USAID was more severe than initially presumed,โ the source told the outlet.
โHe told lawmakers that multiple referrals to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution were being considered,โ they continued. โThe conduct in question arose because of USAIDโs decentralized accountability system that often left grantees on the ground using American tax dollars in ways that were both inappropriate and potentially illegal.โ
USAID has been undergoing a dramatic overhaul following intervention by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The agency, tasked with streamlining government operations and eliminating waste, has already implemented sweeping changes that have disrupted USAIDโs structure and operations.
Several high-ranking officials, including the agencyโs security director, have been placed on administrative leave, while USAIDโs website has been taken offline. Additionally, programs focused on democracy-building and free speech initiatives have been significantly scaled back or put on hold.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court, in a narrow 5-4 decision,ย declinedย to overturn a lower court ruling that unfroze federal spending contracts at USAID, dealing a setback to President Trump and frustrating conservatives.
The ruling denied Trumpโs request to keep billions in aid payments frozen while the administration conducts an audit to investigate waste and fraud.
The order wasnโt signed, but four conservative justicesโSamuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaughโdidnโt agree with it.
Alito wrote in a strong dissent that he was โstunnedโ by the courtโs decision to let the lower court judge order the administration to unfreeze the foreign aid that was at issue in the case.
โA federal court has many tools to address a partyโs supposed nonfeasance. Self-aggrandizement of its jurisdiction is not one of them,โ he wrote.
Steve Vladeck, a CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at Georgetown University Law Center, described the order as โextremely modest.โ
โThe unsigned order does not actually require the Trump administration to immediately make up to $2 billion in foreign aid payments; it merely clears the way for the district court to compel those payments, presumably if it is more specific about the contracts that have to be honored,โ Vladeck said.
โThe fact that four justices nevertheless dissented โ vigorously โ from such a decision is a sign that the Court is going to be divided, perhaps along these exact lines, in many of the more impactful Trump-related cases that are already on their way,โ he added.
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