The walls are closing in on radical New York Attorney General Letitia James, who built her entire career on persecuting President Trump and now finds herself drowning in criminal referrals of her own making.
James is facing two additional criminal referrals after a federal judge dismissed a previous criminal indictment accusing her of mortgage fraud. But instead of taking responsibility for her alleged crimes, this Trump-obsessed prosecutor is doing what Democrats do best – playing the victim and crying about a "revenge campaign."
The new referrals come from evidence gathered by Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte, who has been methodically building cases against the woman who turned the New York AG's office into a political weapon against President Trump and his family.
"They continue this improper revenge campaign instead of helping bring down the rising cost of living in this country,"
James whined, apparently forgetting that she spent years launching her own improper revenge campaign against Trump while New Yorkers suffered under Democrat policies.
According to sources, Pulte alleges that James may have falsified information in documents – the same type of paperwork manipulation she accused President Trump of in her politically motivated civil lawsuit that resulted in a massive judgment later overturned on appeal.
The Hunter Becomes the Hunted
This is what happens when corrupt prosecutors weaponize the justice system for political gain. James made a career out of targeting Trump with frivolous lawsuits and investigations, even campaigning on a promise to "get Trump" before she even took office.
Now that Trump is back in the White House with a mandate from the American people, the tables have turned. Patriots across the country are watching as the same corrupt officials who tried to destroy our President are finally facing accountability.
James can cry "revenge" all she wants, but the American people know the difference between political persecution and legitimate law enforcement. When she was going after Trump, it was "justice." Now that she's facing scrutiny, it's suddenly a "campaign."
How many more criminal referrals will it take before New Yorkers realize they elected a corrupt prosecutor more interested in political theater than actual justice?
