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by Jeremy Kohler and Andy Kroll ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. The attacks on Judge John Barberis in the fall of 2016 appeared on his personal Facebook page. They impugned his ethics, criticized a recent ruling and branded him as a politician with the LOWEST rating for a judge in Illinois.Barberis, a state court judge in an Illinois county across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, was presiding over a nasty legal battle for control over the Eagle Forum, the vaunted grassroots group founded by Phyllis Schlafly, matriarch of the anti-feminist movement. The case pitted Schlaflys youngest daughter against three of her sons, almost like a Midwest version of the HBO program Succession (without the obscenities).At the heart of the dispute and the lead defendant in the case was Ed Martin, a lawyer by training and a political operative by trade. In Missouri, where he was based, Martin was widely known as an irrepressible gadfly who trafficked in incendiary claims and trailed controversy wherever he went. Today, hes the interim U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., and one of the most prominent members of the Trump Justice Department.In early 2015, Schlafly had selected Martin to succeed her as head of the Eagle Forum, a crowning moment in Martins career. Yet after just a year in charge, the groups board fired Martin. Schlaflys youngest daughter, Anne Schlafly Cori, and a majority of the Eagle Forum board filed a lawsuit to bar Martin from any association with the organization. After Barberis dealt Martin a major setback in the case in October 2016, the attacks began. The Facebook user who posted them, Priscilla Gray, had worked in several roles for Schlafly but was not a party to the case, and her comments read like those of an aggrieved outsider.Almost two years later, the truth emerged as Coris lawyers gathered evidence for her lawsuit: Behind the posts about the judge was none other than Martin. ProPublica obtained previously unreported documents filed in the case that show Martin had bought a laptop for Gray and that she subsequently offered to happily write something to attack this judge. And when she did, Martin ghostwrote more posts for her to use and coached her on how to make her comments look more organic. Ed Martin exchanged emails with Priscilla Gray, who had worked in various roles for Phyllis Schlafly, about how to attack Judge John Barberis. (Documents obtained, formatted and highlighted by ProPublica) That is not justice but a rigged system, he urged her to write. Shame on you and this broken legal system.Call what he did unfair and rigged over and over, Martin continued.Martin even urged Gray to message the judge privately. Go slow and steady, he advised. Make it organic.Gray appeared to take Martins advice. Private messaging him that sweet line, she wrote. It was not clear from the court record what, if anything, she wrote at that juncture. Gray told Martin she would direct message Barberis after she was blocked from commenting on his Facebook page. (Documents obtained, formatted and highlighted by ProPublica) Legal experts told ProPublica that Martins conduct in the Eagle Forum case was a clear violation of ethical norms and professional rules. Martins behavior, they said, was especially egregious because he was both a defendant in the case and a licensed attorney. Martin appeared to be deliberately interfering with a judicial proceeding with the intent to undermine the integrity of the outcome, said Scott Cummings, a professor of legal ethics at UCLA School of Law. Thats not OK.Martin did not respond to multiple requests for comment.Martins legal and political career is dotted with questions about his professional and ethical conduct. But for all his years in the spotlight, some of the most serious concerns about his conduct have remained in the shadows buried in court filings, overlooked by the press or never reported at all. His actions have led to more than $600,000 in legal settlements or judgments against Martin or his employers in a handful of cases. In the Eagle Forum lawsuit, another judge found him in civil contempt, citing his willful disregard of a court order, and a jury found him liable for defamation and false light against Cori. Cori also tried to have Martin charged with criminal contempt for his role in orchestrating the posts about Barberis, but a judge declined to take up the request and said she could take the case to the county prosecutor. Cori said her attorney met with a detective; Martin was never charged. Nonetheless, the emails unearthed by ProPublica were evidence that he had violated Missouri rules for lawyers, according to Kathleen Clark, a legal ethics expert and law professor at Washington University in St. Louis. She said lawyers are prohibited from trying to contact a judge outside of court in a case they are involved in, and they are barred from using a proxy to do something they are barred from doing themselves.Such a track record might have derailed another lawyers career. Not so for Martin.As a presidential candidate, Donald Trump vowed to use the Justice Department to reward his allies and seek retribution against his perceived enemies. Since taking office, Trump and his appointees have made good on those pledges, pardoning Jan. 6 rioters while targeting Democratic politicians, media critics and private law firms. As one of its first personnel picks, the Trump administration chose Martin to be interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, one of the premier jobs for a federal prosecutor. A wide array of former prosecutors, legal observers and others have raised questions about his qualifications for an office known for handling high-profile cases. Martin has no experience as a prosecutor. He has never taken a case to trial, according to his public disclosures. As the acting leader of the largest U.S. attorneys office in the country, he directs the work of hundreds of lawyers who appear in court on a vast array of subjects, including legal disputes arising out of Congress, national security matters, public corruption and civil rights, as well as homicides, drug trafficking and many other local crimes. Over the last four years, the office prosecuted more than 1,500 people as part of the massive investigation into the violence at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. While Trump has pardoned the Jan. 6 defendants, Martin has taken action against the prosecutors who brought those cases. In just three months, he has overseen the dismissal of outstanding Jan. 6-related cases, fired more than a dozen prosecutors and opened an investigation into the charging decisions made in those riot cases. Martin has also investigated Democratic lawmakers and members of the Biden family; forced out the chief of the criminal division after she refused to initiate an investigation desired by Trump appointees citing a lack of evidence, according to her resignation letter; threatened Georgetown Universitys law school over its diversity, equity and inclusion policies; and vowed to investigate threats against Department of Government Efficiency employees or chase people in the federal government "discovered to have broken the law or even acted simply unethically.Martin has butchered the position, effectively destroying it as a vehicle by which to pursue justice and turning it into a political arm of the current administration, says an open letter signed by more than 100 former prosecutors who worked in the U.S. Attorneys Office for the District of Columbia under Democratic and Republican presidents. Already, Martin has been the subject of at least four disciplinary complaints with the D.C. and Missouri bars, of which one was dismissed and the other three appear to be pending. Two of the complaints came after he moved to dismiss charges against a Jan. 6 rioter whom he had previously represented and for whom he was still listed as counsel of record. (The first complaint was dismissed after the D.C. bars disciplinary panel concluded that Martin had dismissed the case as a result of Trumps pardons and so did not violate any rules.) The third was filed in March by a group of Democratic lawmakers in the U.S. Senate. The fourth was submitted last week by a group of former Jan. 6 prosecutors and members of the conservative-leaning Society for the Rule of Law. It argues that Martins actions so far threaten to undermine the integrity of the U.S. Attorneys Office and the legal profession in the District of Columbia. If Martin has responded to any of the complaints, those responses have not been made public.Trump has nominated Martin to run the office permanently. Senate Democrats, meanwhile, have vowed to drag out Martins confirmation, demanding a hearing and setting up a fight over one of Trumps most controversial nominees. Ed Martin pats his son, Edward, at an election watch party in St. Louis for his failed congressional bid in 2010. (J. B. Forbes/AP Photo/St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Martin stepped off the elevator into the newsroom of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper. He was angry at a reporter named Jo Mannies, one of the citys top political journalists. At a conference table with Mannies and her senior editors, he accused Mannies of being unethical and pressed the papers leadership to spike her stories about him, according to interviews. Mannies said later she believed he was trying to get her fired. He was attacking her, said Pam Maples, who was managing editor at the time. He was implying she had an ax to grind, that she wanted to get some big story and that she was not being ethical. And when that didnt get traction, it was more like this isnt a story. It wasnt that he said anything about a fact being inaccurate, or he wanted to retract a story; he wanted the reporting to stop.Mannies had been covering a scandal dubbed Memogate that started to unfold in 2007 while Martin was chief of staff to Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt. In that role, Martin was using his government email to undermine Democratic rivals and rally anti-abortion groups. But when reporters requested emails from Blunts staff, the governors office denied they existed. Media organizations joined a lawsuit to preserve the messages and recover them from backup tapes.An attorney for the governor, Scott Eckersley, later said in a deposition that Martin tried to block the release of government emails and told employees to delete their messages. After Eckersley warned that doing so might violate state law, he was fired. He sued the state for wrongful termination and defamation and settled for $500,000. Martin resigned as chief of staff in 2007 after just over a year on the job, and Blunts office would eventually hand over 22 boxes of internal emails. Mike Meiners, director of news administration, center, and Teak Phillips, metro photo editor, right, wheel 22 boxes of emails from Gov. Matt Blunts staff into the St. Louis Post-Dispatch office on Nov. 14, 2008. (Emily Rasinski/Post-Dispatch/Polaris) In a 2008 email to the Associated Press, Martin dismissed Eckersleys lawsuit as a desperate attempt to revise his story after he was fired, citing Eckersleys own testimony that not all emails are public records.The Memogate incident was telling and Martins efforts to have Mannies fired were never reported. His claim was we were misrepresenting what the law was and what he was doing, she told ProPublica. I mean, he can get very hyper. He can get very emotional.When Martin launched a bid for Congress in 2010, he acted as if Memogate was ancient history. He made himself available to Mannies, she recalled, always taking her calls. Years later, he even appeared, lighthearted and bantering, on a St. Louis Public Radio podcast Mannies co-hosted. She said Martin could be outlandish and aggressive, but he could also be disarmingly passionate about whatever cause he was pursuing at the moment, often speaking in a frenetic rush. He just wore people down with his enthusiasm, she said. Martin allowed a different St. Louis reporter to shadow him during his 2010 run for Congress. The reporter asked about the St. Louis election board, a dysfunctional organization that, by all accounts, Martin had helped turn around in the mid-2000s. Martin had fired an employee there named Jeanne Bergfeld, and she later sued for wrongful termination. The board settled the lawsuit.As part of the settlement, Martin agreed not to talk about the case and the board paid Bergfeld $55,000. Martin and two others issued a letter saying she had been a conscientious and dedicated professional.But talking to the reporter covering his campaign, Martin said Bergfeld enjoyed not having to do anything and wasnt interested in changing. The day after the story was published, Bergfeld sued Martin again, this time for violating the settlement agreement. Martin denied making the comments, but the Riverfront Times released audio that proved he had. Martin agreed to pay Bergfeld another $15,000 but delayed signing the settlement for a few months. The judge then ordered Martin to pay some of her legal costs, citing his obstinacy. Phyllis Schlafly, center, is escorted onstage by Martin, right, during a March 2016 campaign rally in St. Louis for Donald Trump. (David Carson/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/Polaris) Martin lost his 2010 congressional bid. He ran for Missouri attorney general two years later and lost again. After his stint as chair of the Missouri Republican Party, he went to work as Schlaflys right-hand man. Martin grew so attached to Schlafly that a lawyer for the Eagle Forum jokingly called him Ed Martin Schlafly.As the 2016 presidential campaign ramped up, Martin supported Trump even though Eagle Forum board members, including Cori, supported Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. At the time, Cori described Trump at the time as an egomaniacal dictator. (Today, she said she supports him.) Cori and other board members were stunned when Schlafly endorsed Trump, with Martin standing by her side. A few weeks later, a majority of the Eagle Forums board voted to oust Martin as president; a lawsuit filed by the board cited mismanagement and poor leadership and described his tenure as deplorable. Martin has maintained that he was Schlaflys hand-picked successor and has characterized his removal as a hostile takeover. Every day, they are diminishing the reputation and value of Phyllis, he said in a 2017 statement. She died in September 2016.Cori and the boards lawsuit sought to enforce Martins removal and demand an accounting of the forums assets. Thats the case that wound up before Barberis.On top of his efforts to direct Grays posts on Barberis Facebook page, Martin prepared a separate statement, according to previously unreported records from the case. The statement called Barberis ruling to remove him as Eagle Forum president judicial activism at its worst that shows what happens when the law is undermined by judges who think they can do whatever they want.Martin emailed the statement, which said it was from Bruce Schlafly, M.D. the name of one of Schlaflys sons to himself, then sent it to two of her other sons, John and Andy, court filings show. Martin said the statement was a declaration of war and urged the Schlaflys to put something like this out to our biggest list. (Its unclear if the message was ever sent.) Bruce Schlafly did not respond to requests for comment.In a 2019 sworn deposition, Coris lawyer asked Martin questions about the posts on Barberis Facebook page and the letter he drafted for Bruce Schlafly. Because of the possibility that he could be charged with criminal contempt of court, Martin declined to comment, on the advice of his own lawyer, though he acknowledged that lawyers are barred from communicating with judges outside of court or engaging in conduct meant to disrupt proceedings. First image: Anne Schlafly Cori won a defamation claim against Martin in 2022. Second image: Eagle Forums office in Alton, Illinois. (Bryan Birks for ProPublica) Andy Schlafly, a lawyer and former Eagle Forum board member who supported Martin in the leadership fight, said no court has ever sanctioned Ed for his engagement of First Amendment advocacy and likened the controversy to liberal attacks on conservative judges. He dismissed concerns about Martin directing Gray to contact the judge, saying she speaks for herself and had every right to voice her outrage. He compared Martins style then and now to Trumps. He said he did not believe the email Martin drafted for his brother Bruce had ever been sent, but if it had been, it would have been no different from Trump posting on Truth Social, which he considered normal behavior in political battles.What would Trump do in that position? Andy Schlafly said of Martins current role in Washington. I would say Trump would be doing just what Eds doing. Elections do have consequences.Gray declined to comment. She was not part of the lawsuit.When Coris lawyers uncovered the emails, they asked a new judge, David Dugan who had taken over the case after Barberis was elected to a higher court why Martin should not be held in criminal contempt for an underhanded scheme to attack the integrity and authority of the court with the Facebook comments about Barberis, according to court records. Dugan declined to take up the criminal contempt motion. But he later found Martin and John Schlafly in civil contempt of court for having interfered with Eagle Forum after Barberis had removed them from the group. John Schlafly appealed the contempt finding and mostly lost. He did not respond to requests for comment. Its unclear if Martin appealed.Cori told ProPublica she also filed an ethics complaint against Martin with the Missouri Office of Chief Disciplinary Counsel, which investigates ethics complaints against lawyers. She said she was told her complaint would have to wait until her lawsuit concluded. The office said it could neither confirm nor deny it had received a complaint.In 2022, when part of Coris lawsuit went to trial, a jury found Martin liable for defaming her and casting her in a false light including by sharing a Facebook post suggesting that she should be charged with manslaughter for her mothers death. It awarded her $57,000 in damages and also found Martin liable for $25,500 against another Eagle Forum board member.Martin argued that the statute of limitations had expired on the defamation claims and that many of his statements were either true or vague hyperbole not subject to proof. He also claimed he could not be held liable because he didnt write the offending post he had merely shared something written by someone else.In a post-trial motion, he also leaned into protections that make it harder for public figures to win defamation cases. Under that higher legal standard, its not enough for a plaintiff to show that a statement was false. Cori also had to prove that Martin knew it was false or acted with reckless disregard for the truth, and he said she didnt prove it.But while hes wrapped himself in First Amendment protections when defending his own speech, hes taken the opposite stance since being named interim U.S. attorney by Trump, threatening legal action against people when they criticize the administration.For instance, after Rep. Robert Garcia called DOGE leader Elon Musk a dick and urged Democrats to bring weapons to a political fight, Martin sent Garcia a letter warning his comments could be seen as threats and demanding an explanation. Martin, center, speaks at a rally outside the Republican National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill on Nov. 5, 2020. (Alex Brandon/AP Photo) With the start of Trumps first presidency, Martin and his family moved to the Northern Virginia suburbs near Washington, D.C. Martin had no formal role in the new administration, but he turned himself into one of the presidents most prolific and unfiltered surrogates. CNN hired him in September 2017 to be a pro-Trump on-air commentator, only to fire him five months later after a string of controversial on-air remarks. He attacked a woman who had accused Alabama U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore of molesting her as a child, praised Trump for denigrating Sen. Elizabeth Warren as Pocahontas, and described some of his CNN co-panelists as rabid feminists and Black racists.Unbowed, Martin went on to make more than 150 appearances on the Russia Today TV channel and Sputnik radio, both Russian state-owned media outlets, first reported by The Washington Post. On RT and Sputnik, Martin railed against the Russia hoax, criticized the DOJ investigation led by special counsel Robert Mueller and questioned American support for Ukraine after Russias invasion by saying the U.S. was wasting money in Kiev for Zelensky and his corrupt guys. The State Department would later say RT and Sputnik were critical elements in Russias disinformation and propaganda ecosystem. The Treasury Department sanctioned RT employees in 2024. The DOJ indicted two RT employees for conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to fail to register as foreign agents. Martins flair for fealty set him apart even from fellow Trump supporters. He cheered the Maine Republican Party for considering whether to censure Sen. Susan Collins for her vote to convict Trump during the second impeachment trial. He singled out Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska in a radio segment titled America Needs to Go on a RINO Hunt. He accused Sen. John Cornyn of going soft on gun rights after Cornyn endorsed a bipartisan gun-safety law after the Uvalde, Texas, mass shooting that left 19 children and two teachers dead.On Jan. 6, 2021, Martin joined the throngs of Trump supporters who marched in protest of the 2020 election outcome. He compared the scene that day to a Mardi Gras celebration and later said the prosecution of Jan. 6 defendants was an op orchestrated by former Rep. Liz Cheney and law enforcement agencies to damage Trump and Trumpism.During an appearance on Russia Today, Martin said then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi weaponized Congress response to the Jan. 6 riots by ramping up security on Capitol Hill, comparing her to the Nazis. Not since the Reichstag fire that was engineered by the Nazis have we seen behavior like what Nancy Pelosi did, he said. As an attorney, he represented Jan. 6 defendants, helped raise money for their families and championed their cause. Last summer, Martin gave an award to a convicted Jan. 6 rioter named Timothy Hale-Cusanelli. According to court records, Hale-Cusanelli held long-standing white supremacist and Nazi beliefs, wore a Hitler mustache and allegedly told his co-workers that Hitler should have finished the job. (In court, Hales attorney said his client makes no excuses for his derogatory language, but the governments description of him was simply misleading.)After hugging and thanking Hale-Cusanelli at the ceremony, Martin told the audience that one of his goals was to make sure that the world and especially America hears more from Tim Hale, because hes extraordinary. Martin speaks during a 2023 hearing on the prosecutions of Jan. 6 rioters. (Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images) In his three months as interim U.S. attorney for D.C., Martin has used his position to issue a series of threats. Hes vowed not to hire anyone affiliated with Georgetown Law unless the school drops any DEI policies. He vowed to Musk that he would pursue any and all legal action against anyone who impedes your work or threatens your people. He publicly told former special counsel Jack Smith and Smiths lawyers to [s]ave your receipts. And in another open letter addressed to Musk and Musks deputy, Martin wrote that if people are discovered to have broken the law or even acted simply unethically, we will investigate them and we will chase them to the end of the Earth to hold them accountable. More often than not, Martins threats have gone nowhere.A month into the job, he announced Operation Whirlwind, an initiative to hold accountable those who threaten public officials, whether theyre DOGE workers or judges. One of the most abhorrent examples of such threats, he said, were Sen. Chuck Schumers 2020 remarks that conservative Supreme Court justices had released the whirlwind and would pay the price if they weakened abortion rights. Even though Schumer walked back his incendiary comments the next day, Martin said he was investigating Schumers nearly 5-year-old remarks as part of Operation Whirlwind. Despite Martins bravado, the investigation went nowhere. No grand jury investigation was opened. No charges were filed. That the probe fizzled out came as little surprise. Legal experts said Schumers remarks, while ill advised, fell well short of criminal conduct.In another instance, when one of Martins top deputies refused to open a criminal investigation into clean-energy grants issued by the Biden administration, Martin demanded the deputys resignation and advanced the investigation himself. When a subpoena arrived at one of the targeted environmental groups, Martins was the only name on it, according to documents obtained by ProPublica.Kevin Flynn, a former federal prosecutor who served in the D.C. U.S. attorneys office for 35 years, told ProPublica that he did not know of a single case in which the U.S. attorney was the sole authorizing official on a grand jury subpoena. Flynn said he could think of only two reasons why this could happen: The matter was of such extraordinary sensitivity that the offices leader took exclusive control over it, or no other supervisor or line prosecutor was willing to sign off on the subpoena out of concern that it wasnt legally or ethically appropriate.And when the dispute between the environmental groups and the Justice Department reached a courtroom, federal Judge Tanya Chutkan asked a DOJ lawyer defending the administrations actions for any evidence of possible crimes or violations evidence, in other words, that could have justified the probe initiated by Martin. The DOJ lawyer said he had none. You cant even tell me what the evidence of malfeasance is, Chutkan said. There are still rules that even the government has to follow, last I checked.Martins tenure has caused so much consternation that in early April, Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., put a hold on Martins nomination. Typically, the Senate Judiciary Committee approves U.S. attorney picks by voice vote without a hearing. But in Martins case, all 10 Democrats on the committee have asked for a public hearing to debate the nomination, calling Martin a nominee whose objectionable record merits heightened scrutiny by this Committee.Even the process of submitting the requisite paperwork for Senate confirmation has tripped him up. According to documents obtained by ProPublica, he has sent the Judiciary Committee three supplemental letters that correct omissions about his background. In an earlier submission, Martin did not disclose any of his appearances on Russian state-owned media. But just before The Washington Post reported that Martin had, in fact, made more than 150 such appearances, he sent yet another letter correcting his previous statements.I regret the errors and apologize for any inconvenience, he wrote. Sharon Lerner contributed reporting.