Trump Admin May Consider Charges Against USAID Workers After DOGE Discoveries

President Donald Trumpโ€™s 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, USAIDโ€™s deputy administrator-designate, briefed members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the ongoing review of the agencyโ€™s spending and operations, conducted under Trumpโ€™s 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 investigationโ€”which has been shaped by findings from Elon Muskโ€™s DOGE initiativeโ€”could result in criminal referrals related to misconduct at USAID.

Apparently, thereโ€™s 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. โ€œThey intend to refer USAID officials to DOJ,โ€ he added, highlighting that fraud โ€œis 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.

โ€œIf they are detecting outright fraud, not just bad programs, not just ignoble programs, not just programs that donโ€™t support the national interest of the United States, if theyโ€™re finding fraud, then, absolutelyโ€ the perpetrators should face prosecution, Self said.

He added that criminal charges would only result from a robust โ€œpaper trailโ€ of evidence.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to have to have a paper trail to prove that,โ€ Self added. โ€œAnd 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.

โ€œMarocco 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.

โ€œHe told lawmakers that multiple referrals to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution were being considered,โ€ they continued. โ€œThe conduct in question arose because of USAIDโ€™s 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 USAIDโ€™s structure and operations.

Several high-ranking officials, including the agencyโ€™s security director, have been placed on administrative leave, while USAIDโ€™s 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 Trumpโ€™s request to keep billions in aid payments frozen while the administration conducts an audit to investigate waste and fraud.

The order wasnโ€™t signed, but four conservative justicesโ€”Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, and Brett Kavanaughโ€”didnโ€™t agree with it.

Alito wrote in a strong dissent that he was โ€œstunnedโ€ by the courtโ€™s decision to let the lower court judge order the administration to unfreeze the foreign aid that was at issue in the case.

โ€œA federal court has many tools to address a partyโ€™s 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 โ€œextremely modest.โ€

โ€œThe 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.

โ€œThe 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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