The department plans to make the request to Trump nominees as early as Tuesday, a department official said on condition of anonymity to preview the move, Bloomberg reported.
Replacing top prosecutors is a standard process of a new administration that seeks to put its own stamp on US attorneys’ offices across the country. The timeline for the officials to depart is weeks.
The decision, which was reported earlier by CNN, is expected to affect 56 Senate-confirmed US attorneys. There are 93 US attorneys, according to the Justice Department.
Despite the overhaul, the Biden administration is asking US Attorney David Weiss in Delaware to continue in office. Weiss is overseeing the tax investigation of Hunter Biden, the president’s son. Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson made that request of Weiss during a Monday night call, the department official said.
John Durham, the US attorney in Connecticut, will be asked to step down from that position but will continue in his role as special counsel looking into the origins of the investigation into Trump’s dealings with Russia, the official said.
In 2017, at the start of the Trump administration, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked 46 US attorneys appointed by President Barack Obama to submit their resignations. Most had to leave their jobs immediately although some were given time to finish their work.
Merrick Garland, Biden’s nominee for attorney general, has yet to have his confirmation hearing.
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