The member of the presidents 2016 campaign team is the latest beneficiary of the Justice Departments generosity for those with presidential ties.
Former Trump adviser Carter Page latest to get a lucrative Justice Department payout
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
— Mike Walker (@newnarrative.bsky.social) 2026-04-23T18:12:30.083Z
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/former-trump-adviser-carter-page-latest-to-get-a-lucrative-justice-department-payout
In response to highly dubious civil lawsuits, the Trump Justice Department has been exceedingly generous lately, agreeing to lucrative settlements with plaintiffs who are politically aligned with the White House
. For example, the family of Ashli Babbitt, the Jan. 6 rioter fatally shot by a police officer during the attack, received roughly $5 million in taxpayer money last year.....
One had to wonder who might be next, though few might have guessed who the latest addition to the list would be. Politico reported:
The Trump administration has agreed to pay $1.25 million to settle claims from 2016 Trump campaign adviser Carter Page that the FBI and Justice Department illegally entangled him in court-ordered surveillance, according to a court filing and a person familiar with the deal.
Page sued the federal government along with top FBI and Justice Department officials in 2020, saying they abused their foreign intelligence surveillance authorities after his travel to Russia drew the eye of the FBI and fueled investigations of then-candidate Donald Trumps ties to the Kremlin.
As a New York Times report summarized,
There is no dispute that the F.B.I. significantly botched its applications for four rounds of court orders authorizing surveillance of Mr. Pages phone calls and emails between late 2016 and mid-2017.
But whether Mr. Page had a legal right to compensation from taxpayers was in doubt......
After the 2016 election,
Republican officials nevertheless condemned the scrutiny, as did Page, who filed a civil suit. The former Kremlin and Trump adviser will now walk away with $1.25 million in taxpayer money, although as Politicos report noted, the settlement does not resolve Pages effort to revive his claims against a slew of former government officials he named as defendants, including former FBI Director James Comey and former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe.
As for who might be the next beneficiary of the Justice Departments largesse, watch this space.