The US attorney’s office in Chicago is facing turmoil after problems with recent grand jury presentations resulted in three dropped criminal cases. Andrew Boutros, the US Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, has launched a review of over 100 transcripts of confidential grand jury sessions to investigate the issue.
Background
The dropped cases include allegations of covid fraud, arson, and a politically-charged case against ICE protestors. Boutros stated that he decided to drop the cases due to the work of one lower-level prosecutor, who allegedly made improper statements to the grand jury.
The prosecutor, Sheri Mecklenburg, is still employed by the Justice Department despite the issues with her work. The US attorney’s office may review other prosecutors’ work if they find a high error rate of irregularities in the grand jury.
Consequences
The situation has led to concerns about the trustworthiness of the Justice Department, particularly with federal judges in the Northern District of Illinois. The department’s political leadership is being closely watched, and there may be months of internal and external reviews ahead.
Defense attorneys have accused the US attorney’s office of trying to blame a single prosecutor for the misconduct, rather than acknowledging a deeper issue within the office. They have requested an outside investigator to examine the Justice Department’s work on the case.
Original reporting: KEYT (Ventura/Santa Barbara) — read the source article.