For those Americans who may have forgotten how the machinery of political persecution operates in Washington, allow me to refresh your memory with the latest episode in the capital’s long running circus of selective outrage. The newest attraction features attorney Lindsey Halligan, a Florida licensed lawyer with a reputation for competence and professionalism, who briefly served as Interim United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Her appointment came after President Donald Trump discovered that the sitting U.S. Attorney, Eric Siebert, had failed to disclose a glaring conflict of interest so large it could be seen from space. Siebert’s father in law happened to be the godfather of former FBI Director James Comey’s daughter. Apparently this charming familial entanglement did not strike the Washington establishment as worthy of immediate ethical scrutiny.
Opposing Halligan in this carnival spectacle is Michelle Kuppersmith, a professional victim and complaint filer who serves as executive director of the Washington based nonprofit Campaign for Accountability and is also listed as vice president of the advocacy group Fix the Court. Kuppersmith is not an attorney, though that has never impeded her enthusiasm for filing bar complaints against them. She resides comfortably on Manhattan’s Lower East Side with her husband in a residence reportedly worth roughly $2 million dollars and participates in the civic pageantry of Manhattan Community Board 3. Her career began working for a private investigation firm before she entered Washington’s thriving industry of reputational demolition, where accusations are manufactured with assembly line efficiency and political adversaries are treated as quarry.
The facts surrounding Lindsey Halligan’s supposed “scandal” are both simple and devastating to the narrative carefully constructed by the outrage merchants of Washington. Halligan was appointed Interim United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia after President Trump learned that Eric Siebert had failed to disclose his conflict involving James Comey’s family. That failure alone should have triggered alarms throughout the Department of Justice. Instead it was quietly ignored until the President replaced Siebert with Halligan.
What followed was an extraordinary sequence of judicial acrobatics. Judges later dismissed an indictment pursued under Halligan’s tenure not because the evidence was lacking but because they asserted that her appointment had somehow been procedurally improper. The dismissal rested not on the merits of the case but on a legal technicality regarding the authority of her appointment. In other words, the facts of the underlying case were never seriously challenged. The indictment was discarded based on a debatable interpretation of administrative procedure.
Naturally this became the moment when Washington’s outrage industry sprang into action. Enter the Campaign for Accountability, under the watchful supervision of Michelle Kuppersmith, which filed ethics complaints against Halligan with both the Florida Bar and the Virginia State Bar in late 2025. Within hours the professional rumor mill began spinning. Activist journalists eagerly recycled the allegations as proof that another attorney connected to Donald Trump must have engaged in ethical misconduct. In Washington, proximity to Trump is itself treated as a kind of professional contagion.
Joshua Bromwich of The New York Times dutifully amplified the allegations. The story circulated widely. Social media tribunals convened. Commentators who had never read the underlying filings declared Halligan guilty of ethical malpractice. The script was unfolding exactly as the outrage industry intended.
Then reality intruded. In February 2026 a letter from the Florida Bar appeared to indicate that an investigation into Halligan had begun after receiving the complaint. Activists celebrated as though the Bastille had fallen. Commentators pontificated. The fake news media and their imbecilic audiences congratulated themselves on yet another successful exposure of alleged Trump era corruption.
But on March 6, 2026 the Florida Bar issued a correction that landed with the quiet force of a thunderclap. There was no investigation. The earlier communication had been erroneous. The Bar clarified that it had merely received the complaint and was monitoring related proceedings as part of routine procedure. No disciplinary inquiry existed. The supposed scandal evaporated instantly.
Did this prompt any reflection among the accusers? Of course not. Michelle Kuppersmith publicly demanded to know why the Bar was not investigating Halligan even after the Bar had explicitly clarified that no investigation existed. One must admire the sheer persistence. When the facts collapse beneath your argument, simply demand that the investigation continue anyway. Because that, dear reader, is the real objective.
In the modern Marxist activist playbook the accusation itself is the weapon. File the complaint. Generate the headlines. Allow journalists eager for controversy to circulate the allegation as fact. By the time the truth emerges weeks later, the reputational damage has already been accomplished.
Meanwhile several inconvenient facts remain almost entirely absent from the narrative carefully curated by Halligan’s critics.
Halligan did not create the judicial controversy that activists now exploit. The controversy arose from decisions made by judges who dismissed a federal indictment not because the evidence was defective but because they concluded that Halligan’s interim appointment had been procedurally improper. That decision effectively erased an entire prosecution based on an administrative technicality rather than the merits of the evidence. Yet in Washington’s curious moral geometry the attorney becomes the villain while the judges responsible for the ruling escape scrutiny altogether.
Even more astonishing is the utter silence regarding the original conflict that prompted Halligan’s appointment in the first place. Eric Siebert’s father in law being the godfather of James Comey’s daughter is not exactly a trivial social connection. When a U.S. Attorney is responsible for decisions involving the former FBI Director whose family is personally entwined with his own most observers might reasonably expect disclosure…and recusal.
The Campaign for Accountability filed no ethics complaints about that conflict. Apparently some conflicts are invisible.
The role of the media in this spectacle has been equally instructive. Bromwich and his colleagues at The New York Times showed tremendous enthusiasm in amplifying the allegations against Halligan. Now that the Florida Bar has confirmed that no investigation exists, the same newspaper appears somewhat less eager to correct the original impression. Perhaps the retraction department at The New York Times operates on the same timetable as medieval cathedral construction. These things take centuries.
Through it all Lindsey Halligan has been forced to defend her professional reputation against accusations generated by activist organizations and amplified by journalists who rarely revisit their conclusions once the original narrative collapses.
This episode should concern every attorney in the country. If activist groups can weaponize bar complaints against lawyers who once served in politically controversial administrations, then public service will soon become a profession reserved exclusively for the timid and the ideologically approved. And that, of course, is precisely the goal.
The carnival continues because it works. File the accusation. Generate the scandal. Allow the truth to arrive quietly long after the reputational damage is done.
Lindsey Halligan’s real crime was not professional misconduct. Her real crime was serving President Donald Trump without apology. In the corrupt carnival of Washington’s political justice system, that offense remains unforgivable.











