Trump Powell Investigation Dropped: Analyst Calls It a “180-Degree Surrender”
The Trump Powell investigation, once one of the most politically charged probes in Washington, has officially come to a quiet end. Late Friday morning on April 24, multiple outlets, including ABC News and MS NOW, reported that the U.S. Department of Justice under the Trump administration has dropped its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
The decision marks a striking reversal, especially given how aggressively the case had been pushed in earlier months.
Pirro’s Sudden Reversal Raises Eyebrows
MS NOW anchor Ana Cabrera turned to the network’s criminal justice and national security reporter Ken Dilanian for analysis, and his take was blunt. According to Dilanian, the move represents “a 180-degree surrender” by Jeanine Pirro, the former Fox News host now serving as U.S. attorney in Washington and overseeing the probe.
Pirro had been one of the most vocal figures attached to the case, making the abrupt withdrawal all the more surprising. Her decision to step away suggests prosecutors simply could not build a case strong enough to move forward.
Why the Inspector General Angle Matters
In her statement, Pirro indicated that the matter would be handed over to the inspector general at the Federal Reserve. But Dilanian was quick to point out that this wasn’t exactly new territory.
According to his reporting:
- The Fed inspector general has already been reviewing the same matter for months.
- Jerome Powell himself requested the inspector general’s review back in July of last year.
- Investigators have so far found no evidence of any criminal wrongdoing.
In other words, the case being passed to the inspector general was already being looked at, and that office has not turned up anything supporting criminal charges.
A Politically Charged Probe From the Start
Critics of both Trump and Pirro had long argued that the Powell investigation was little more than political theater. The probe came at a time when Trump was openly frustrated with the Federal Reserve chairman, repeatedly criticizing Powell for refusing to lower interest rates as aggressively as the president wanted.
The political tension surrounding the probe extended beyond Democratic critics. Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina took a hard line on the issue, signaling that he would not support Trump’s pick to replace Powell, Kevin Warsh, unless the investigation was dropped.
That pressure may have played a role in the abrupt about-face.
“There Was Never a Case”
Perhaps the most damaging part of the analysis came when Dilanian summarized what Pirro’s withdrawal really means. According to him, the decision is essentially an admission that no criminal case ever existed in the first place.
He noted that one of Pirro’s own prosecutors had previously told a judge in open court that they were unaware of any criminal wrongdoing by Powell. Dilanian put it plainly, saying the entire probe was “a product of Donald Trump’s imagination.”
That’s a striking conclusion from a national security reporter, and it underscores just how thin the legal foundation of the case was.
What This Means Going Forward
The dropping of the Trump Powell investigation may have several lasting effects:
- It clears a major political obstacle for Kevin Warsh’s nomination process.
- It puts renewed pressure on the DOJ over how politically driven cases are handled.
- It reaffirms Powell’s standing at the Federal Reserve at a delicate economic moment.
- It raises questions about how Pirro’s tenure at the U.S. attorney’s office will be viewed going forward.
Final Thoughts
The Trump Powell investigation began with significant political fanfare and ended with a quiet retreat. Whether viewed as a legal failure, a political miscalculation, or both, the outcome reinforces a familiar pattern of high-profile probes that fizzle once scrutiny intensifies. With the inspector general already wrapping up its own examination and finding no wrongdoing, Powell appears to be exiting this storm largely unscathed, while the DOJ’s handling of the case may face questions for months to come.






















