A federal judge has issued a temporary injunction to freeze the Department of Justice’s newly created “Anti-Weaponization Fund.” The $1.8 billion account was set up by the Trump administration to pay out cash to conservative figures who claim they were targeted by unfair prosecutions during the Biden presidency.
The court order halts all operations of the fund, pausing the transfer of money, the review of incoming financial claims, and all cash payouts. The freeze represents a major legal blow to the administration, as critics step up their efforts to completely dismantle what they describe as a corrupt taxpayer-funded slush fund for the president’s political allies.
The Legal Dispute
The origin of this massive $1.8 billion fund stems from a personal civil lawsuit filed by President Donald Trump against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Trump had sued the agency for $10 billion after an IRS employee leaked his private tax records to the media.
Instead of fighting the case in court, the Department of Justice stepped in to settle the lawsuit. The settlement was orchestrated by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, who served as Trump’s personal criminal defense lawyer before being appointed to lead the DOJ in April.

As part of the settlement terms, Blanche established the $1.8 billion Anti-Weaponization Fund. The DOJ argued that the money would serve as an official restitution pool to financially compensate individuals who suffered from government “lawfare,” a term the administration uses to describe the criminal prosecutions of conservative activists, Trump allies, and participants in the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot.
The Injunction: Why the Court Intervened
Judge Leonie Brinkema of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia stepped in to freeze the account after a group of plaintiffs filed a lawsuit challenging its constitutional legality. Brinkema noted that freezing the money was necessary to preserve the status quo because DOJ lawyers stubbornly refused to promise that they wouldn’t start handing out cash payouts before a full judicial review could take place.
The legal challenge against the DOJ was brought forward by a diverse coalition of plaintiffs:
1. Andrew Floyd: A former federal prosecutor who was fired last year after actively participating in the criminal prosecution of January 6 defendants.
2. Jonathan Caravello: A university professor who was arrested in 2025 during an immigration protest against a federal raid in California.
3. The City of New Haven: A municipality currently being sued by the Trump administration for maintaining local sanctuary policies that protect undocumented immigrants.
Hours after Brinkema’s freeze order, a separate federal judge in Washington, D.C., scheduled an emergency Wednesday hearing at the request of the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), seeking a secondary restraining order to keep the fund locked down. Judge Brinkema has scheduled a major formal hearing for June 12 to decide whether to extend the injunction into a permanent freeze.
The Slush Fund Backlash
The political reaction to the court’s intervention has been highly polarized. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer praised the judge’s ruling, labeling the account an “insurrectionist slush fund” and a depraved taxpayer-funded giveaway designed to reward criminals and MAGA cronies who attacked law enforcement officers at the Capitol.
The Justice Department issued a defiant public statement, expressing absolute confidence that the account will ultimately clear all legal hurdles. The DOJ spokesperson argued that the settlement framework is backed by ample historical precedent, explicitly citing similar large-scale financial settlements orchestrated by the Obama administration to resolve class-action civil rights disputes. The department declared that it will not allow the personal political preferences of activist federal judges to block its efforts to provide financial justice to victims of government overreach.
Public Funds to Reward Criminal Devotion
This is a jaw-dropping, unconstitutional abuse of public money designed to turn the United States Treasury into a private ATM for the president’s political loyalists. The sheer audacity required for a sitting president’s former defense lawyer to take control of the Department of Justice, settle a personal lawsuit filed by his old boss, and use that settlement to bypass Congress and create a $1.8 billion cash pool is staggering. It completely shatters the ethical boundaries that are supposed to protect taxpayer dollars from blatant political corruption.
Labeling this an “Anti-Weaponization” initiative is a dark piece. The administration isn’t trying to stop the weaponization of law enforcement; they are explicitly weaponizing the federal budget to reward people who broke the law in their name. To use public funds to write restitution checks to individuals who actively participated in a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol, while simultaneously firing dedicated career prosecutors like Andrew Floyd for simply doing their jobs, is a direct attack on the American rule of law. It signals to the country that criminal behavior is perfectly acceptable, provided you commit those crimes in service of the ruling political party.
The DOJ’s defense that this fund matches “Obama-era precedents” is a completely hollow justification. Past administrations used large-scale settlements to compensate entire classes of systemic discrimination victims, such as minority farmers or mistreated homeowners. They did not use federal settlements to build a private war chest for a sitting president’s close associates and campaign supporters. Judge Brinkema’s decision to freeze this account isn’t an act of judicial activism; it is a vital, heroic defense of constitutional checks and balances. If the federal courts do not permanently lock down this account, it will establish a terrifying green light for future administrations to routinely loot the federal treasury to finance and reward their own lawless behavior.





