WASHINGTON — Eight inspectors general fired without notice last month sued in federal court Wednesday arguing President Donald Trump violated the law by not warning Congress of their terminations.
The eight inspectors general want a judge to declare their firings by email were "legally ineffective" and put them back to work.
The case is the latest to challenge a wave of actions by President Trump that brazenly violated legal limits on his power.
A group of eight former internal government watchdogs who were fired by President Trump filed a lawsuit Wednesday challenging ...
The lawsuit claims the president failed to notify Congress or provide reasons for termination.
Inspectors general fired by President Donald Trump are suing to get their jobs back as watchdogs for waste and fraud at federal agencies.
Inspectors general for some agencies were not fired ... Mark Milley from the National Infrastructure Advisory Council, former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms from the President’s Export Council and ...
President Trump fired the USAID inspector general one day after he released a report detailing the impact of the ...
Eight government watchdogs have sued the Trump administration over their mass firing that removed oversight of his new administration ...
A longtime federal prosecutor in Albany, Robert P. Storch, is among the eight inspectors general suing for their jobs back ...
WASHINGTON — (AP) — The White House fired the inspector general for the U.S. Agency for International Development on Tuesday, ...