• Federal judge dismisses lawsuit seeking to stop DOJ grant cancellations

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jul 9 21:39:55 2025
    XPost: law.court.federal, alt.politics.economics, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.fraud

    https://apnews.com/article/justice-grants-funding-cuts-law-enforcement- victims-327796a0357136f244475603dc48f854

    WASHINGTON (AP) � A federal judge has allowed the Trump administration to rescind nearly $800 million dollars in grants for programs supporting
    violence reduction and crime victims.

    U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta in Washington on Monday denied a
    preliminary injunction sought by five organizations on behalf of all
    recipients of the more than 360 grant awards, and granted a motion by the federal government to dismiss the case. Mehta called the Department of Justice�s actions �shameful,� but said the court lacked jurisdiction and
    the organizations had failed to state a constitutional violation or
    protection.

    �Defendants� rescinding of these awards is shameful. It is likely to harm communities and individuals vulnerable to crime and violence,� Mehta wrote
    in his ruling. �But displeasure and sympathy are not enough in a court of
    law.�

    The Justice Department�s Office of Justice Programs cancelled the grants
    worth more than $800 million in April, saying it had changed its
    priorities to, among other things, more directly support certain law enforcement operations, combat violent crime and support American victims
    of trafficking and sexual assault.

    A message left seeking comment from Democracy Forward officials was not immediately returned. A Department of Justice spokesperson declined to
    comment on the ruling.

    The lawsuit filed by the Democracy Forward Foundation and the Perry Law
    firm argued that the grant terminations did not allow due process to the organizations and lacked sufficient clarity. The lawyers also said the
    move violated the constitutional separation of powers clause that gives Congress appropriation powers.


    Many of the organizations that lost the federal money said the unexpected cancellations mid-stream had meant layoffs, program closures and loss of community partnerships.

    The five organizations named as plaintiffs sought class status to
    represent all affected grant recipients. Attorneys General from at least
    18 states and the District of Columbia had filed amicus briefs in support
    of the action, as well as local governments and prosecuting attorneys-
    several of whom had lost grants for victims programs, alternatives to prosecution programs or others.

    The Justice Department asked Mehta to dismiss the suit, arguing in a court filing that there was �no legal basis for the Court to order DOJ to
    restore lawfully terminated grants and keep paying for programs that the Executive Branch views as inconsistent with the interests of the United States.�

    Noting that it intended to redirect the grant funds, it called the suit a �run-of-the mill contract dispute� and said it belonged in a different
    court.


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