Stanley Woodward, President Trump’s nominee for

Anti-Trump Legal Record: Suing the Trump Administration
In 2019, Woodward drafted legal briefs in Oceana, Inc. v. Ross, a lawsuit targeting then-Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. The case challenged regulatory actions taken by the Trump administration.
Woodward’s role in the litigation undermines his current nomination and directly contradicts the America First mission. He once helped sue the very administration he now seeks to serve. His past actions as Trump DOJ nominee are raising eyebrows.
It signals a concerning disconnect between his past actions and the administration he’s being asked to serve as Trump DOJ nominee.
J6 Neglect: Ryan Samsel’s Family Speaks Out
Woodward’s handling of January 6 defendant Ryan Samsel has also drawn backlash. In May 2024, The Gateway Pundit and journalist Laura Loomer revealed that Samsel paid Woodward over $50,000. Yet, he received what he described as “poor representation.” While suffering from life-threatening blood clots and golf-ball-sized lumps on his body in prison, Samsel reportedly couldn’t reach his attorney.
In text messages obtained by Loomer, Samsel’s family begged Woodward to intervene. Woodward replied: “The best thing for him to do is submit a medical call slip.” The family stated that Samsel had already submitted three without receiving treatment.
How can a lawyer accused of neglecting a political prisoner be trusted as the third-ranking official in the U.S. Department of Justice as the Trump DOJ nominee?
Navarro Defends Woodward, But Case Undermines Confidence
Peter Navarro, another Woodward client, lashed out at Laura Loomer for exposing these failures. But Navarro’s case only underscores the issue. He served four months in prison after refusing to cooperate with the partisan January 6 Committee. Woodward failed to shield him from a politically motivated conviction.
Despite that outcome, Navarro continues defending the man who couldn’t defend him as Trump DOJ nominee.
Personnel Problem: DEI and Pro-Amnesty Staff Inside Trump’s DOJ
The concerns don’t stop with Woodward himself.
His team includes Ashleigh Bondoc, a pro-DEI attorney with a background in defending undocumented, criminal immigrants. Bondoc now serves as Special Assistant to Woodward and works in the White House. Both Bondoc and Woodward report directly to Attorney General Pam Bondi.
For Trump’s base, the DOJ nomineee, Woodward, represents something unacceptable. The DOJ is not a diversity project—it’s supposed to restore justice and protect the American people. Bondoc’s presence signals something else entirely.

Conclusion: Trump’s DOJ Vetting Crisis Deepens
Stanley Woodward’s nomination embodies the vetting crisis plaguing Trump’s second-term administration. A Democrat donor, an attorney who sued Trump officials, and a man accused of abandoning a J6 prisoner should never have made it this far.
If Attorney General Pam Bondi continues staffing the DOJ with people who oppose the America First agenda, the base will demand answers. Trump DOJ nominee approval may derail the mission before it even begins.
The post EXCLUSIVE: Trump DOJ Nominee Stanley Woodward Linked to Obama and J6 Failures appeared first on Loomered.