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Fired by Team Trump, Former US Attorney Michele Beckwith Joins Team Newsom
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By The New York Times
Published 3 minutes ago on
October 29, 2025

Michele Beckwith in Davis, Calif., Sept. 18, 2025. Beckwith was fired as a U.S. attorney by President Donald Trump after warning a top immigration official to follow the law — she now has a new job with Gov. Gavin Newsom of California. (Rozette Halvorson/The New York Times)

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SAN FRANCISCO — After President Donald Trump fired the acting U.S. attorney in Sacramento, his California nemesis, Gov. Gavin Newsom, took notice.

First, Newsom stuck up for the ousted prosecutor, Michele Beckwith, on social platform X. “WAKE UP, AMERICA,” the governor’s press office posted. “DEMOCRACY IS ON THE BRINK!” The post was accompanied by photos of Beckwith and Trump, his face half-hidden in shadows.

Now, Newsom has hired Beckwith as a deputy legal affairs secretary. In government-speak, that means she is an attorney providing legal counsel to the governor and state agencies.

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“Michele brings to our office more than 20 years of legal experience and invaluable knowledge of the law,” said Tara Gallegos, a spokesperson for Newsom. “Trump’s loss is California’s gain.”

The White House referred a request for comment on Beckwith’s new role to the Department of Justice, which declined to comment on the matter.

The New York Times first reported last month that Beckwith had been quietly fired less than six hours after emailing Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol chief based in Southern California, that he would have to abide by court orders and the Constitution while conducting a planned operation in her district.

She sent the email to Bovino on July 15 after he had notified her that he was headed to Sacramento for an immigration operation. She said she wanted to ensure he knew about court orders in her district requiring that Border Patrol agents could only detain people if they had a reasonable suspicion that those people were violating federal immigration law.

That afternoon, Beckwith received an email from the White House stating that her employment with the Department of Justice was terminated “on behalf of President Donald J. Trump.” Her phone and computer went dark, and she was marched out of the office.

Raids in Home Depot Parking Lot

Two days later, Bovino and his agents raided a Home Depot parking lot in Sacramento. He posted a video on X in which he said: “Folks, there is no such thing as a sanctuary city. There is no such thing as a sanctuary state.”

Bovino said in an emailed statement last month to the Times: “The former Acting US Attorney’s email suggesting that the United States Border Patrol does not ALWAYS abide by the Constitution revealed a bias against law enforcement.”

Bovino’s tactics have come under scrutiny in Chicago, where a federal judge admonished him Tuesday after the agency apparently violated her orders restricting the use of force and tear gas.

Beckwith’s firing was an early example of the president’s ousting of top federal prosecutors who did not carry out his agenda. After firing her, he fired a U.S. attorney in Virginia who had determined there was not enough evidence to indict James Comey, the former FBI director, and Letitia James, the New York state attorney general, both of whom are political targets of the president. The replacement U.S. attorney later indicted both of them.

There are 93 U.S. attorneys who oversee federal prosecutions in districts around the country. Beckwith, a career prosecutor, had been working as the No. 2 attorney in the office when her boss, who had been appointed by the Biden administration, resigned shortly before Trump was inaugurated. She then kept doing her old job while filling in as acting U.S. attorney.

Trump not only removed her as acting U.S. attorney but also ended her career as a federal prosecutor, a move experts said was unusual.

Beckwith, who started her new job last week, said in an interview that she was still getting acclimated and was looking forward to “a very interesting year.”

“To me, it’s not political — it’s existential for our country,” she said. “So if there’s something I can do to assist in keeping our democracy and Constitution alive, that is what I am happy to do.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Heather Knight/Rozette Halvorson
c. 2025 The New York Times Company

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