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Ex-CIA chief Brennan, a Trump target, seeks to force DOJ to preserve records

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 2:54 PM

By Andrew Goudsward

WASHINGTON, July 1 (Reuters) – Former CIA Director John Brennan sued on Wednesday seeking to force the U.S. Justice Department to preserve records related to federal investigations examining his role in a U.S. intelligence ​community assessment that Russia boosted President Donald Trump’s first presidential campaign in ‌2016.

The records and communications will be necessary for Brennan’s anticipated legal challenges to a potential indictment, including to bolster claims that any future prosecution was vindictive and started at Trump’s behest, Brennan’s lawyers argued in a court filing in Washington federal court.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami ‌has ​been examining whether Brennan, who led the CIA during ⁠former Democratic President Barack Obama’s ⁠administration, made false statements to Congress in discussing the intelligence assessment and is part of a larger long-running criminal conspiracy against Trump’s constitutional rights.

Brennan has called the investigation politically motivated and his lawyers have accused the Trump ​administration of improper tactics in the probe.

Trump has long railed against efforts to tie his 2016 campaign to Russia, calling it the “Russia Hoax” and demanding prosecutions ⁠for officials involved.

“While we cannot comment on the ⁠existence, or lack thereof, of an investigation, it is certainly ​rich that John Brennan is accusing anyone of a ‘retribution campaign,'” a Justice Department spokesperson ​said.

The lawsuit seeks to take advantage of growing skepticism in the courts ‌about DOJ investigations targeting critics and perceived political adversaries of Trump. Judges have shown a growing willingness to intervene early in investigations, blocking subpoenas this year in probes involving former Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and Democratic officials in Minnesota.

Brennan’s complaint ⁠argues that internal DOJ records and communications are at risk of being lost because of the Trump administration’s use of ephemeral messaging apps like Signal and because officials ⁠have not complied with federal ‌recordkeeping laws.

Those materials would be crucial to Brennan’s attempts ⁠to dismiss a future indictment, his lawyers argue. The lawsuit ​seeks ‌a court order directing DOJ to preserve a wide variety of ​material related ⁠to the two investigations before any indictment is brought.

“A careful examination of the prosecutors’ emails, texts, instant messages, internal memoranda and the like would enable a court to determine whether their decisions were based on legitimate law enforcement concerns or on a desire to selectively and/or vindictively prosecute Director Brennan,” the complaint reads.

(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward; ​Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)