Former U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspector general Phyllis Fong was not arrested after she was ousted from her ...
It’s not immediately clear whether the firings are legal, as the Trump administration is required to give a 30-day notice.
An inspector general of the U.S. Department of Agriculture—one of 17 inspectors general summarily fired by President Donald Trump on Jan. 25—was led out of her office on Jan. 27 by police ...
Congress was not given the legally required 30-day notices about the removals, something that even a top Republican decried ...
President Trump has fired several independent government watchdogs. They're now sharing warnings about what it could mean for ...
Inspectors general named in the lawsuit include those from the Department of Defense, the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Education. Court documents filed in Washington ...
Inspectors general fired by President Donald Trump are suing to get their jobs back as watchdogs for waste and fraud at federal agencies.
The eight inspectors general want a judge to declare their firings by email were "legally ineffective" and put them back to work.
Eight inspectors general whom Donald Trump fired from their federal agency watchdog posts are suing for their jobs back, ...
The fired inspectors general who joined the suit are Rob Storch (Defense), Michael Missal (VA), Christi Grimm (HHS), Sandra Bruce (Education), Phyllis Fong (Agriculture), Larry Turner (Labor ...
The IGs are not the only Trump administration officials fighting to undo Trump’s decision to fire them. A member of the National Labor Relations Board is suing to return to her position, and a ...