THU 02 JUL 2026 · GMT EDITION A WHITESTONE INTELLIGENCE PUBLICATION
MARKETS · CYBER · MEMOS · MODELS
DAILY ISSUES26 MAY27 MAY28 MAY29 MAY30 MAY31 MAY01 JUN02 JUN03 JUN04 JUN05 JUN06 JUN07 JUN08 JUN09 JUN10 JUN11 JUN12 JUN13 JUN14 JUN15 JUN16 JUN17 JUN18 JUN19 JUN21 JUN22 JUN23 JUN24 JUN25 JUN26 JUN27 JUN28 JUN29 JUN30 JUN01 JUN02 JUNALL ›
FRONT PAGE / MEMOS / MEM-2026-07-01-F2
MEMOS · sec filings · 2026-07-01SCOOP 72

Ex-CIA Chief John Brennan Sues Trump, Admin Officials Over Allegedly Vindictive Investigations

Ex-CIA Chief John Brennan Sues Trump, Admin Officials Over Allegedly Vindictive Investigations Authored by Timothy Frudd via The Epoch Times , Former CIA Director John Brennan is seeking a court order requiring the Trump.

·FILED ISSUE 2026-07-01·2 MIN READ·RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02 UTC·✓ RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02

VERDICT — CONFIRMED

pipeline confidence · primary + corroborating sources verified · re-verified 2026-07-02 UTC
Memos desk illustration
Generated desk illustration · The Dossier Wire · not a photograph

Former CIA Director John Brennan has sued President Donald Trump and administration officials over what he characterizes as vindictive investigations into him, and is seeking a court order requiring the administration to retain records related to those probes, according to a report by Timothy Frudd of The Epoch Times, republished July 1 by ZeroHedge.

Per the report, the records Brennan wants preserved concern investigations into him and his involvement in probing alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. The request for a retention order is a preservation measure: it would bind the government to keep documents intact while the underlying dispute is litigated, rather than resolve any claim on the merits.

The Justice Department had not formally brought an indictment against Brennan at the time of the report, per The Epoch Times. The description of the investigations as vindictive is Brennan's allegation, set out in his filing; the administration officials named in the suit had not, in the material reviewed, responded to the claims, and no court has ruled on them.

Background

Brennan served as director of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2013 to 2017 under President Barack Obama, capping a career that also included a stint as White House homeland security and counterterrorism adviser. He led the agency during the period in which the U.S. intelligence community assessed, in a January 2017 report, that Russia had sought to influence the 2016 election — an assessment that became a durable point of contention between Trump and senior intelligence officials of that era.

Brennan has been among the most persistent public critics of Trump since leaving office, and the friction has run in both directions: in 2018, during his first term, Trump revoked Brennan's security clearance, an unusual step against a former director. Litigation seeking preservation of government records is a recognized tool in disputes with federal agencies, since agency records schedules otherwise permit routine disposal of certain materials.

What comes next

The immediate procedural step is for the court to take up Brennan's preservation request, which the government can oppose. Watch for the administration's formal response on the docket, any ruling on the retention order, and whether the Justice Department's posture toward Brennan shifts from investigation to charges — none of which was established in the material reviewed.

PRIMARY SOURCE

Fox News — Politics
— (2026-07-01) · fetched at filing · archived at publication
Filed underINDICTMENTSUES

Sources · two-source rule

PRIMARYFox News — Politics— (2026-07-01)
CORROB.ZeroHedge— (2026-07-02)
Share
Filed by the Memos desk · verified by the verification desk · re-verified 2026-07-02 · Our standards: the two-source rule ›
CITE THIS FILE — The Dossier Wire · mem-2026-07-01-f2 · filed 2026-07-01 · https://thedwire.com/wire/mem-2026-07-01-f2-ex-cia-chief-john-brennan-sues-trump-admin-officials-over.html · Primary and corroborating sources listed above; archived at publication. Republishing & licensing: hello@thedwire.com.
More from Memos FULL DESK ›
Memos desk illustration
Generated desk illustration · not a photograph
MEMOS · SCOOP 68

Alibaba and AUS Merchant Services Agree to Pay $600 Million to Resolve DOJ Allegations Over Illegal Pharmaceutical Sales

Alibaba Group Holding Limited and its U.S.-based payment processor AUS Merchant Services Inc., formerly known as Alipay US, entered a non-prosecution agreement to pay $600 million to resolve the Justice Department's allegations that they violated the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, per the DOJ's July 1 press release. Per the release

✓ verifiednewSOURCE ↗
READ THE FILE ›
Memos desk illustration
Generated desk illustration · not a photograph
MEMOS · SCOOP 66

Justice Department Sues California to Halt Glock Ban and Handgun Roster

The Justice Department filed a lawsuit against California to halt the state's newly enacted Glock ban, per the DOJ's July 1 press release. Per the release, the suit also seeks to prevent enforcement of the state's "Handgun Roster," a list limiting the legal firearms individuals may purchase, and the United States challenges both measures

✓ verifiednewSOURCE ↗
READ THE FILE ›
Memos desk illustration
Generated desk illustration · not a photograph
MEMOS · SCOOP 66

EagleBank Agrees to Pay More than $9.7 Million to Resolve Bank Secrecy Act Investigation

EagleBank, a community bank operating in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia, and its parent Eagle Bancorp Inc. entered into a non-prosecution agreement and agreed to pay over $9.7 million to resolve the Justice Department's investigation into violations of the Bank Secrecy Act, per the DOJ's June 30 press release. As a non-pr

✓ verifiednewSOURCE ↗
READ THE FILE ›

The morning wire in your inbox — every brief, primary sources linked, no noise.

Free tier. The Wire — continuous desk briefs · Records archive · Bureau alerts.

Stored to the wire's subscriber list. No spam, unsubscribe any time.