Aakash Singh — Associate Deputy Attorney General, DOJ
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Aakash Singh — Associate Deputy Attorney General, DOJ

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Aakash Singh — Associate Deputy Attorney General, DOJ

Role: Associate Deputy Attorney General, Office of the Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice (2025–present)
Immediate supervisor: Todd Blanche (Deputy Attorney General; acting AG after Pam Bondi’s firing, March 2026)
Age: 33 (as of 2026)
Party / Affiliation: Trump political appointee; endorsed by Mike Davis, Trump’s informal legal adviser
Status: Active as of May 22, 2026. Singh played a central documented role in the Abrego Garcia prosecution, which was dismissed today by U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. as “vindictive and selective.”

Priority: P1

Tracked Activities: Directed vindictive prosecution of Kilmar Abrego Garcia (dismissed by court, May 22, 2026); orchestrated retaliatory prosecution campaign against Trump-designated political targets including James Comey; led push to charge state judge Hannah Dugan; directed US attorneys to treat Trump as their “chief client” and step aside if unwilling; directed prosecutors to impanel new grand juries if sitting grand juries refused to indict; sought impeachment referrals for federal judges; instructed tripling of charges against Mexican politicians; demanded single-day data compliance from US attorneys.

> Basis for Inclusion

>

> Subject classification: Non-Elected Government Official — DOJ Political Appointee, Office of the Deputy Attorney General

> Role at time of documented conduct: Associate Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice, 2025–present

>

> This profile documents conduct in an official government capacity. Singh holds a senior political appointment at the U.S. Department of Justice, overseeing the 94 U.S. attorneys’ offices. Federal courts have expressly named Singh in court opinions documenting his role in a prosecution adjudicated as a constitutional violation (vindictive prosecution in violation of the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause). The profile is anchored in Anchor E (use of official non-elected position to advance conduct that a federal court determined violated constitutional due process) and Anchor D (Singh voluntarily and publicly assumed a prominent role in the controversy through a Bloomberg Law profile, a public call with 93 US attorney heads, and his named presence in multiple court records and publicly available DOJ communications).

>

> Protected speech note: Political statements, legal positions, and public advocacy documented in this profile are included as factual context. Singh’s documented conduct is his use of official governmental power — directing charging decisions, pressuring US attorneys, and orchestrating prosecutions — not his political speech. Where public statements are documented, they provide context for official conduct.

Background

Career

Aakash Singh is the first-generation son of Indian immigrant parents who grew up in New Jersey and Florida. He studied history and political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (BA, 2010–2014) and obtained his JD from George Washington University Law School (2015–2017, focus: banking, corporate, finance, and securities law).

Before law school he interned for Rep. David Rouzer (R-NC) (June–August 2015). While in law school and thereafter he worked for Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) (May–August 2016, March 2017–June 2018, Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control) and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) on the Senate Judiciary Committee (June 2018–August 2019). It was during this period that he worked alongside Mike Davis, then also on the Senate Judiciary Committee staff and later a prominent Trump legal adviser.

After the Hill, Singh became an Assistant U.S. Attorney:

  • Eastern District of North Carolina (2020–2023): gang violence and drug trafficking prosecutions
  • Middle District of Florida (2023–2025)

Appointment and Rise

Singh was endorsed directly for his DOJ headquarters role by Mike Davis, who described him to Pam Bondi and Todd Blanche as “fearless.” Davis stated publicly: “Every federal prosecutor and every federal agent in America reports to the deputy attorney general. If they work for a US attorney’s office, they do that through Aakash Singh.” Source: Bloomberg Law, “In-Your-Face DOJ Aide Rides Prosecutors for ‘Chief Client’ Trump,” May 2026.

Singh “reported to the deputy AG’s office 13 months ago and quickly became an omnipresent figure prodding US attorneys’ offices for information far more frequently than chief prosecutors had experienced in prior administrations.” Source: Bloomberg Law, May 2026.

Note on prior record: Bloomberg Law reported that Singh carries a prior driving under the influence (DUI) charge — described by a former federal prosecutor as unusual for an appointee at his seniority level. “Normally these political appointees are chosen not only for political reasons, but because they have credentials that are impeccable, with extensive prosecutorial and managerial experience,” former federal prosecutor Mark Rasch told The Guardian.


Documented Actions

1. Vindictive Prosecution of Kilmar Abrego Garcia — Case Dismissed Today, May 22, 2026

Breaking (May 22, 2026): U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. of the Middle District of Tennessee dismissed the federal indictment against Kilmar Abrego Garcia — a Salvadoran man who was wrongly deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador’s CECOT prison in March 2025 — ruling the prosecution “vindictive and selective.”

Crenshaw’s 32-page opinion opened with a quote from former U.S. Attorney General Robert Jackson: “The danger of picking the person first and the crime second … That is the situation here.”

Singh’s documented role in the Abrego Garcia prosecution:

Court records unsealed by Judge Crenshaw document Singh’s direct involvement in directing the prosecution from DOJ headquarters (“Main Justice”):

  • April 27, 2025: Singh emailed Acting U.S. Attorney Robert McGuire about the Abrego Garcia matter — the same day McGuire received the case file from Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). This was 17 days after the Supreme Court ordered Abrego Garcia’s release. Source: Judge Crenshaw’s order, Middle District of Tennessee.
  • April 28, 2025: Singh received the Tennessee Highway Patrol report on Abrego Garcia. Source: Court records unsealed per Judge Crenshaw’s Dec. 3, 2025 order.
  • April 30, 2025: Emails between Singh, McGuire, and Jacob Warren (AUSA in Tennessee) on criminal charges from Abrego’s 2022 traffic stop. Singh wrote: “It’s a top priority.” McGuire responded: “We want the high command looped in.” Source: Court records, Middle District of Tennessee (Tennessee Lookout, allrisenews.com).
  • April 30, 2025: Singh received an email from Assistant U.S. Attorneys in Tennessee, Alabama, and Texas about Abrego’s cooperating witness and grand jury appearance. Source: Court records.
  • May 18, 2025: Singh received an update on the Abrego indictment, grand jury testimony, and whether the indictment would be sealed. The email read: “We’re working over the weekend to finalize an indictment that we will send to you tomorrow night or first thing Monday.” Source: Court records, as cited in Judge Crenshaw’s opinion.
  • May 18, 2025: Singh instructed McGuire to “close[ly] hold” the draft indictment until the group “g[o]t clearance” — with the implication, as Judge Crenshaw wrote, “that ‘clearance’ would come from the Office of the Deputy Attorney General.” Source: Judge Crenshaw’s order.
  • May 20, 2025: Singh requested a memo from McGuire and others on the case. Source: Court records.
  • May 21, 2025: Abrego Garcia was indicted on human smuggling charges. He was brought to Tennessee for prosecution.

Judge Crenshaw’s findings (May 22, 2026 dismissal order):

“The objective evidence here shows that, absent Abrego’s successful lawsuit challenging his removal to El Salvador, the Government would not have brought this prosecution. The Executive Branch closed its investigation on the November 2022 traffic stop. Only after Abrego succeeded in vindicating his rights did the Executive Branch reopen that investigation.”

“Absent Blanche’s tainted investigation, Agent Saoud would not have called McGuire, Singh would not have brought him into the fold, and McGuire would not have sought an indictment against Abrego.”

Singh’s involvement “touched on everything from the timing of the indictment to the substance of the potential charges.”

Crenshaw also found that McGuire had previously denied that Blanche ordered the prosecution, but the unsealed documents “may contradict its prior representations that the decision to prosecute was made locally and that there were no outside influences.”

Court record: United States v. Kilmar Abrego Garcia, U.S. District Court, Middle District of Tennessee, dismissed May 22, 2026 for vindictive and selective prosecution.
Sources: Tennessee Lookout, May 22, 2026; Law&Crime, May 22, 2026; CNBC, May 22, 2026; Mediaite, May 22, 2026; allrisenews.com; KRGV, 2025.


2. “Chief Client” Directive — Undermining US Attorney Independence

In January 2026, Singh presided over a weekly video meeting of leaders from all 93 U.S. attorneys’ offices. He told attendees that President Trump is their “chief client” and warned that anyone “uncomfortable with advancing his administration’s directives must step aside for willing replacements.”

The directive was described by three people briefed on the meeting. Bloomberg Law reported it represented “an unprecedented move-fast-and-break-things approach to steering contentious cases that have drawn rebukes from judges and juries and alarmed top prosecutors.”

Singh demanded single-day deadline responses to emails requesting case-specific data, with prosecutors “scrambling late into the night.”

Source: Bloomberg Law, “In-Your-Face DOJ Aide Rides Prosecutors for ‘Chief Client’ Trump,” May 2026 (citing three people briefed on the meeting; interviews with more than two dozen lawyers).


3. James Comey Prosecution — Recruited Prosecutors; Case Also Dismissed

Singh was involved in the Trump DOJ’s push to prosecute former FBI Director James Comey in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA).

Bloomberg Law reported: Singh “was also immersed in Trump loyalist Lindsey Halligan’s takeover of the Eastern Virginia US attorney’s office in response to the president’s public scolding of Bondi for not prosecuting his perceived enemies. Office leaders were forced out for resisting indicting former FBI Director Comey.”

Singh recruited two friends from North Carolina’s Eastern District to join the Comey prosecution team after veteran EDVA prosecutors refused to participate. A judge dismissed the Comey indictment; an appeal was pending as of May 2026. Singh’s two recruited colleagues subsequently left DOJ.

Source: Bloomberg Law, May 2026. The Daily Beast, 2026. See also reporting on EDVA leadership purge following resistance to Comey prosecution.


4. Targeting of State Judge Hannah Dugan — Felony Charges

In April 2025, Singh “led the push for federal prosecutors in Wisconsin to bring felony charges against then-Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan for obstructing ICE officers,” according to a person close to the case interviewed by Bloomberg Law.

Judge Dugan was arrested April 25, 2025, charged with obstruction and concealing an individual to prevent arrest after allegedly directing an undocumented immigrant defendant to exit her courtroom through a private “jury door” ahead of an ICE arrest operation. A federal jury convicted Dugan in December 2025. Sentencing was pending as of May 2026.

Targeting a sitting state judge for a courthouse action represented an escalation of the White House’s broader project of targeting judges — a project Bloomberg Law reported Singh had been “pressing DOJ leaders to escalate.”

Source: Bloomberg Law, May 2026 (citing person close to the case); Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, April 25, 2025; NPR, December 18, 2025.


5. Seeking Impeachment Referrals Against Federal Judges

In a virtual meeting with US attorneys, Singh requested that all offices identify federal judges perceived to engage in judicial activism, so that the information could be used to inform potential impeachment referrals to Congress.

This directive was part of the broader White House project — which Singh was pressing DOJ to escalate — of targeting judges who had ruled against the administration.

Source: The Daily Beast, 2026 (citing three people briefed on the meeting).


6. Grand Jury Pressure — Advising New Grand Juries If Existing Ones Won’t Indict

The New York Times reported that Singh advised prosecutors to impanel new grand juries if a sitting grand jury refused to indict in efforts to pursue more serious charges. This raises serious concerns about grand jury independence and the constitutional role of grand juries as checks on prosecutorial overreach.

Source: The New York Times, as reported by The Daily Beast, 2026.


7. Directive to Triple Charges Against Mexican Politicians

On approximately May 15, 2026, Singh conducted an internal teleconference with the 93 U.S. federal prosecutors. He directed them to triple the number of charges against Mexican politicians suspected of cooperating with drug trafficking cartels and to pursue terrorism charges in addition to drug trafficking charges.

The directive was reported by the New York Times and widely covered internationally, including Global Voices and Vanguardia.

Source: The New York Times, May 15, 2026 (via Global Voices/Ground News, May 2026).


8. DC Protest Charging Pressures — August 2025

In August 2025, Singh met with federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., as the DOJ sought to bring severe charges against people protesting the military and federal police presence in the capital ordered by Trump.

Source: The Daily Beast, 2026.


Salience for Patriot University

Aakash Singh is one of the most consequential figures in the Trump DOJ’s transformation of the federal prosecutorial apparatus into an instrument of political retribution. He represents the operational layer between Trump/Blanche policy directives and the 94 US attorneys’ offices that execute federal prosecutions across the country.

His profile is directly relevant to several core Patriot University missions:

  1. Constitutional rights: His role in the Abrego Garcia prosecution — now judicially confirmed as a constitutional violation (vindictive prosecution, Fifth Amendment) — is among the clearest documented examples of executive branch abuse of the criminal justice system to punish a named individual for exercising his legal rights.
  1. Judicial independence: His systematic campaign to target judges (seeking impeachment referrals, pushing felony charges against Dugan, “pressing DOJ leaders to escalate” judge targeting) represents a coordinated assault on an independent judiciary.
  1. Prosecutorial independence: His “chief client” directive directly subverts the founding principle that federal prosecutors represent the United States — not the president — and that charging decisions must be made on evidence and law, not political loyalty.
  1. Due process: His advice to prosecutors to impanel new grand juries when existing ones refuse to indict treats grand juries as procedural obstacles rather than constitutional safeguards.
  1. Truth and reconciliation documentation: Singh is a named actor in multiple court records that constitute primary-source documentation of constitutional violations. These records will be critical to any future accountability process.

Factual correction requests: If you believe information in this profile is incorrect, please contact factcheck@patriot.university with your name (optional), the specific claim, and any supporting documentation. We review all submissions and correct verified errors promptly.


Sources

  1. Bloomberg Law, “In-Your-Face DOJ Aide Rides Prosecutors for ‘Chief Client’ Trump,” May 2026. https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/in-your-face-doj-aide-rides-prosecutors-for-chief-client-trump
  1. Tennessee Lookout, “In Nashville, a federal judge dismisses indictment against Kilmar Abrego Garcia,” May 22, 2026. https://tennesseelookout.com/2026/05/22/in-nashville-a-federal-judge-dismisses-indictment-against-kilmar-abrego-garcia/
  1. Law&Crime, “‘Retaliatory taint’: Judge dismisses indictment and tosses case against Kilmar Abrego Garcia,” May 22, 2026. https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/retaliatory-taint-judge-dismisses-indictment-and-tosses-case-against-kilmar-abrego-garcia-after-doj-does-not-address-the-evidence-about-vindictive-prosecution/
  1. CNBC, “Kilmar Abrego Garcia charges dropped, judge says Trump DOJ case vindictive,” May 22, 2026. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/22/kilmar-abrego-garcia-charges-dropped-trump-doj-case-vindictive.html
  1. Mediaite, “DOJ’s Criminal Case Against Kilmar Abrego Garcia Dismissed for Vindictive Prosecution,” May 22, 2026. https://www.mediaite.com/media/news/new-dojs-criminal-case-against-kilmar-abrego-garcia-dismissed-for-vindictive-prosecution/
  1. allrisenews.com (All Rise), “‘A top priority’: Todd Blanche linked to Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s prosecution in unsealed emails,” 2026. https://www.allrisenews.com/p/top-priority-blanche-abrego-litman
  1. KRGV, “DOJ pushed to prosecute Kilmar Abrego Garcia only after mistaken deportation, judge’s order says,” 2025. https://www.krgv.com/news/doj-pushed-to-prosecute-kilmar-abrego-garcia-only-after-mistaken-deportation-judge-s-order-says/
  1. Talking Points Memo, “How DOJ’s ‘Brashest Enforcer’ Is Key to the Abrego Garcia Case,” 2026. https://talkingpointsmemo.com/morning-memo/aakash-singh-abrego-garcia-vindictive-prosecution
  1. The Daily Beast, “Justice Department Aide Scolds Prosecutors for Forgetting Trump Is Their ‘Chief Client’,” 2026. https://www.thedailybeast.com/justice-department-aide-scolds-prosecutors-for-forgetting-trump-is-their-chief-client/
  1. Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, “Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan charged with 2 felonies in ICE case,” April 25, 2025. https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/breaking/2025/04/25/milwaukee-county-judge-hannah-dugan-arrested-by-feds-at-courthouse/83270885007/
  1. NPR, “A federal jury returns guilty verdict for Judge Hannah Dugan,” December 18, 2025. https://www-s1.npr.org/2025/12/18/nx-s1-5648584/judge-hannah-dugan-guilty-obstruction-ice
  1. LegiStorm, Aakash Singh Biography. https://www.legistorm.com/person/bio/268554/Aakash_Singh/hashkey/3694ba1a.html
  1. Court record: United States v. Kilmar Abrego Garcia, U.S. District Court, Middle District of Tennessee, Case dismissed May 22, 2026 for vindictive and selective prosecution.
  1. New York Times (via Global Voices/Ground News), reporting on Singh’s directive to triple charges against Mexican politicians, May 15, 2026.
  1. The Kenya Times, “Kilmar Abrego Garcia Human Smuggling Indictment Dismissed,” May 2026. https://thekenyatimes.com/americas/kilmar-abrego-garcia/

Profile created: May 22, 2026. This profile documents breaking news — the dismissal of United States v. Abrego Garcia — and court records unsealed during that case. All court citations reflect publicly available court documents.

Led Push for State Judge Dugan Felony Charges

Singh led the push for federal prosecutors in Wisconsin to bring felony charges against then-Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan for obstructing ICE officers. Judge Dugan was arrested and charged with obstruction for allegedly directing an undocumented defendant to exit through a private ‘jury door’ ahead of ICE arrest. Source: Bloomberg Law, May 2026; Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, April 25, 2025.

Singh Emails on Abrego Garcia Prosecution

Aakash Singh emailed Acting U.S. Attorney Robert McGuire about the Abrego Garcia matter — the same day McGuire received the case file from Homeland Security Investigations (HSI). This was 17 days after the Supreme Court ordered Abrego Garcia’s release. Source: Judge Crenshaw’s order, Middle District of Tennessee.

Singh Designates Abrego Case ‘Top Priority’

In emails between Singh, McGuire, and Jacob Warren (AUSA in Tennessee) about criminal charges from Abrego’s 2022 traffic stop, Singh wrote: ‘It’s a top priority.’ McGuire responded: ‘We want the high command looped in.’ Source: Court records, Middle District of Tennessee (Tennessee Lookout, allrisenews.com).

Singh Orders ‘Close Hold’ on Draft Indictment

Singh instructed McGuire to ‘close[ly] hold’ the draft indictment against Abrego Garcia until the group ‘g[o]t clearance’ — with the implication that ‘clearance’ would come from the Office of the Deputy Attorney General. Source: Judge Crenshaw’s order, Middle District of Tennessee.

Abrego Garcia Indicted on Human Smuggling Charges

Kilmar Abrego Garcia was indicted on human smuggling charges after Singh’s coordination from DOJ headquarters. Court records show Singh’s involvement ‘touched on everything from the timing of the indictment to the substance of the potential charges.’ Source: Court records, Middle District of Tennessee; Judge Crenshaw’s order.

Met with DC Prosecutors on Protest Charges

Singh met with federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., as the DOJ sought to bring severe charges against people protesting the military and federal police presence in the capital ordered by Trump. Source: The Daily Beast, 2026.

Judge Dugan Convicted After Singh-Led Push

A federal jury convicted Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan in December 2025 on obstruction charges that Singh had led the push to file. The targeting of a sitting state judge for a courthouse action represented an escalation of targeting judges. Source: NPR, December 18, 2025; Bloomberg Law, May 2026.

Directed US Attorneys to Treat Trump as ‘Chief Client’

Singh presided over a weekly video meeting of leaders from all 93 U.S. attorneys’ offices and told attendees that President Trump is their ‘chief client’ and warned that anyone ‘uncomfortable with advancing his administration’s directives must step aside for willing replacements.’ Source: Bloomberg Law, May 2026.

Ordered Tripling Charges Against Mexican Politicians

Singh conducted an internal teleconference with the 93 U.S. federal prosecutors and directed them to triple the number of charges against Mexican politicians suspected of cooperating with drug trafficking cartels and to pursue terrorism charges in addition to drug trafficking charges. Source: The New York Times, May 15, 2026.

Abrego Garcia Case Dismissed for Vindictive Prosecution

U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw Jr. dismissed the federal indictment against Kilmar Abrego Garcia, ruling the prosecution ‘vindictive and selective.’ The judge found that Singh’s involvement from DOJ headquarters made the prosecution constitutionally invalid under the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause. Source: Tennessee Lookout, May 22, 2026; Judge Crenshaw’s order, Middle District of Tennessee.

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