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The DOJ Just Dropped Its Criminal Probe Of Fed Chair Powell - Clearing The Path For Warsh

Published Apr 25, 2026
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Summary:
  • Federal prosecutors closed the criminal probe into Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
  • The case centered on a remodel at the Federal Reserve's headquarters.
  • The close of the case clears a major hurdle for Kevin Warsh's Senate confirmation.

Markets spent months watching the Fed. They also watched a criminal probe aimed at the Fed Chair.

That second story just ended.

Prosecutors dropped their case against Jerome Powell. The case was about a remodel at the Fed's building.

US Attorney Jeanine Pirro leads that office. She said her team would stand down while the Fed's own watchdog finishes a review.

She also left the door open to reopen the case if new facts come up. Stocks moved higher on the news.

Why This Matters For Investors

The Fed is the referee for the whole economy. It sets the rules that every asset price answers to.

Referees in the middle of a criminal case are not great for markets. Doubt over who is calling the game feeds into the price of every mortgage, bond, and stock.

With the probe closed, that risk is off the board. It does not tell you where rates are going, but it removes one big wild card.

What The Probe Was About

The case started with a fight over a remodel. The Fed ran the project at its DC headquarters.

Critics said the project was mismanaged. That turned into a political fight before prosecutors opened a criminal review.

The criminal case is now closed. But the remodel is still under review by the Fed's own watchdog on a separate, civil track.

A Politically Charged Story

The remodel has been in the news for years. Critics have gone after the cost, the design, and the way the Fed ran the project.

That fed into a wider fight over Fed leadership. Some Republicans wanted Powell out, and some Democrats stood by him.

The criminal probe pulled the story into the legal world. Now the legal part is over, but the political part is not.

The Warsh Angle

The bigger piece might be who comes next.

Kevin Warsh is President Trump's pick to lead the Fed. His confirmation has been moving through the Senate while the Powell probe dragged on.

With the criminal case gone, the politics get simpler. Warsh is already hinting he wants to rethink how the Fed measures prices.

That sets up a much clearer runway for him to take the chair.

The Watchdog Track

The civil review does not go away with the criminal case. The watchdog is still looking at how the remodel was run and how the money was spent.

If that review finds new facts, Pirro said her office could take another look. That keeps a light pressure on the Fed even without an active probe.

What The Market Took Away

The first read from traders was simple. One piece of risk got pulled off the board.

That did not fix rates. It did not change the path of prices. It just meant one less thing to worry about.

Fed watchers say that is all the market was asking for. A clean desk, not a clean slate.

Worth Noting

The door is not fully shut. Pirro could reopen the case at any time.

For now, investors got what they wanted. It is one less source of noise between them and the next rate decision.

The wild card is mostly off the table.

Disclosure

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