USAID’s Waste, Fraud and Abuse in
Ukraine

Judicial
Watch Sues USAID for Records on Ukraine Aid Waste, Fraud and Abuse
Judicial
Watch Sues National Archives for JFK Assassination Records
Court
Hearing Held in Fani Willis Documents Scandal
$200
Million Program Giving Illegal Alien Minors Free Lawyers Reinstated
Soros
Group Sues Trump for Cutting Aid to Soros Funded Nonprofit
Judicial Watch Sues USAID for Records on Ukraine Aid Waste, Fraud
and Abuse
The American people deserve an immediate and full accounting of the
billions of dollars that Biden’s U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) sent to Ukraine. USAID is a notoriously corrupt agency,
and we hope the Trump administration brings transparency on this key
issue.
We continue our own investigation. We filed a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) lawsuit against
USAID for records regarding waste, fraud and abuse tied to aid money sent
to Ukraine (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Agency for International Development (No.
1:25-cv-00508)).
Our FOIA requests include a demand for records of USAID’s
then-Administrator Samantha Power and others regarding:
1) any reported allegations of sexual
exploitation, abuse or trafficking of migrants fleeing Ukraine and/or
receiving assistance from USAID inside Ukraine.
2) any third-party monitoring contractors or
NGOs reporting potential fraud associated with USAID aid to Ukraine.
3) any reported allegations of Direct Cash
Assistance Program fraud or attempts to conduct cash transactions in
Russian Rubles associated with USAID aid to Ukraine.
4) any USAID-branded commodities appearing
for sale in open markets or outside of response activities in Ukraine.
USAID never responded to our FOIA requests, citing “unusual
circumstances.”
In December 2023, the agency’s Inspector General’s Office issued
a fraud
warning citing “Conflicts of Interest in USAID’s Ukraine
Response,” including:
Example 1: Missing Conflict of Interest Policy
A USAID prime awardee, executing a Multipurpose Cash Assistance program,
discovered that an employee of a subawardee was simultaneously a registered
beneficiary of the program and tasked with confirming beneficiary
eligibility. The prime awardee reported the matter to OIG, which determined
that the subawardee did not have a conflict of interest policy in place to
prevent an employee from participating in administered programs as
beneficiaries.
Example 2: Unreported Personal Relationship Between Procurement Staff
and Bidder
A USAID prime awardee determined that a subawardee’s procurement
official had an unreported ongoing personal relationship with a bidder.
Upon discovery, the bidder was disqualified, and the procurement official
was retrained by the subawardee on handling conflicts of interest and
reporting potential conflicts.
Example 3: Awardee Employee Working for a Subawardee
A USAID prime awardee identified an unreported conflict of interest when
it found an employee responsible for quality control of a subawardee was
also working for that subawardee. After identifying this conflict, the
prime awardee prohibited the conflicted employee from any further contact
with the subawardee and issued the subawardee a written warning.
According to a February 13, 2025, USAID Inspector General’s report,
the agency did not properly vet humanitarian groups it funded to prevent
sexual abuse of Ukrainian war victims:
According to the United Nations, approximately 90 percent of the nearly
6.5 million people who fled the country are women and children, with women
at the greatest risk of sexual exploitation and abuse (SEA), human
trafficking, and forced prostitution.
In July 2022, we issued an advisory notice highlighting key
considerations for USAID’s developing humanitarian response led by its
Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA), which included risks of SEA.
However, more than a year later, we had not received any allegations of
SEA, which raised concerns that cases were underreported.
President Trump on January 20 ordered a
“90-day pause in United States foreign development assistance for
assessment of programmatic efficiencies and consistency with United States
foreign policy.”
In a January 2025 exit
memo, USAID stated it sent Ukraine “close to $35 billion” since the
Russian invasion in February 2022.
We have several ongoing FOIA lawsuits regarding Ukraine.
In December 2020, we uncovered records
from the State Department revealing that then-United States Deputy Chief of
Mission to Ukraine and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs George Kent sent an email to then-Ambassador to Ukraine
Marie Yovanovitch stating that Ukraine Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko
informed Kent that he was offered “high-level” access to Hillary
Clinton’s presidential campaign by the same firm that represented Burisma
Holdings.
Also in December 2020, we revealed records
from the State Department which showed that former U.S. Ambassador to
Ukraine Marie “Masha” Yovanovitch had specifically warned in 2017 about
corruption allegations against Burisma Holdings. During her November 2019
testimony in the impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump,
Yovanovitch told lawmakers that she knew little about Burisma.
In January 2020, we sued the
United States Department of State for records related to a January 19,
2016, meeting at the White House that included Ukrainian prosecutors,
embassy officials and CIA employee Eric Ciaramella, who reportedly worked
on Ukraine issues while on detail to both the Obama and Trump White Houses.
Ciaramella was widely
reportedas the person who filed the whistleblower complaint that
triggered the impeachment proceedings. His name reportedly was “raised
privately in impeachment depositions, according to officials with direct
knowledge of the proceedings, as well as in at least one open hearing held
by a House committee not involved in the impeachment inquiry.”
Judicial Watch Sues National Archives for JFK Assassination
Records
We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against
the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) for records about
the assassination of President John F. Kennedy (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. National Archives and Records
Administration (1:25-cv-00577)).
We sued after the National Archives failed to respond to a January 20,
2025, FOIA request for:
All previously unreleased records in the possession of the National
Archives and Records Administration regarding the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy. This request includes, but is not limited to,
all records transferred to NARA by the Assassination Records Review
Board.
On January 19, 2025, then President-Elect Donald Trump announced his
intention to make public the “remaining records related to the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy.” On January 23, an executive
order was issued to that effect:
More than 50 years after the assassinations of President John F.
Kennedy, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., the Federal Government has not released to the public all of its
records related to those events. Their families and the American people
deserve transparency and truth. It is in the national interest to finally
release all records related to these assassinations without delay.
The President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of
1992 required all records related to the assassination of President Kennedy
to be publicly disclosed in full by October 26, 2017, unless the President
certifies that: (i) continued postponement is made necessary by an
identifiable harm to the military defense, intelligence operations, law
enforcement, or conduct of foreign relations; and (ii) the identifiable
harm is of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in
disclosure.
Despite overwhelming public interest, many records about the JFK
assassination remain secret. These records can and should be released under
FOIA, so that the American people are assured the Deep State isn’t
playing games and ignoring President Trump’s transparency orders.
We have several FOIA cases pending against the National Archives.
In January 2024, a FOIA lawsuit uncovered records from
the Archives that showed then-Vice President Joe Biden’s use of an email
alias to correspond with family members, including son Hunter and brother
James; and that Joe Biden signed off on the cessation of Secret Service
protection for Hunter Biden and Beau Biden’s daughter Natalie during
an August
2016trip to Kosovo.
In August 2023, we sued the
Archives for records of its role in President Trump’s White House records
controversy; whether it offered Trump a secure storage location other than
the National Archives; and if the Archives consulted with the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence regarding the classification or
declassification procedures of any of the alleged classified documents
found at Trump’s Florida residence.
In August 2022, we uncovered that,
as of March 31, the Archives had released only 1,276
pages of over 8,000 records about the unprecedented document
dispute and raid on the home of former President Trump.
In October 2022, we sued the
Barack Obama Presidential Library for Obama White House records about the
2016 “Russia Collusion Hoax.” The records, which by law were not
available under FOIA until five years after President Obama left office,
are held at the library, which is part of the National Archives
system.
Court Hearing Held in Fani Willis Documents
Scandal
We were in court today for a hearing before
Judge Robert C.I. McBurney of the Superior Court of Fulton County, GA, on a
motion for in camera (private) “inspection and
appointment of special master” to oversee District Attorney Fani
Willis’ search for records of communications with Special Counsel Jack
Smith and the House January 6 Committee.
This comes in the lawsuit we
filed in March 2024 after Willis falsely denied having any records
responsive to our earlier Georgia Open Records Act (ORA) request for
communications with Smith’s office and/or the January 6 Committee (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. Fani Willis et al. (No. 24-CV-002805)).
After finding Willis in default, the court ordered a hearing on December
20, 2024, which resulted in an order that
found Willis liable for fees and expenses that “shall be paid within two
weeks of the entry of this Order.”
The court then awarded us $21,578 “attorney’s fees and costs.”
Willis’ operation made the payment 10 days after the court-ordered
deadline.
Thanks
to this lawsuit, Willis
finally admitted
to having records showing communications with the January 6 Committee but
refused to release all but one document in response to the
court order that found her in default. She cited a series of legal
exemptions to justify the withholding of communications with the January 6
Committee. The only document she did release is one already public letter
to January 6 Committee Chairman Benny Thompson (D-MS).
We subsequently filed a
motion asking
the court to appoint
a special master to oversee Willis’ search for records in the
lawsuit and to conduct a private inspection of any records found.
Regarding the appointment of a special
master, we stated:
Willis by her own admission conducted at least three searches before
finding any responsive records not already supplied by [Judicial Watch].
She did not even bother to conduct a search until the Complaint was filed.
Her records custodian says he does not know the Cellebrite [digital
investigations] equipment he apparently had a hand in ordering can be
used to search cell phone texts and other data…. Moreover, the custodian
had no standard practice for conducting searches and keeps no records of
the methods used in a given search.
The foregoing gives rise to grave suspicion that all responsive records
have not been found. The Court should appoint a special master to supervise
and monitor the record searches. The special master should have authority
to audit searches and conduct searches herself. She also should have
authority to hire such consultants and experts as may be needed to execute
her commission. The special master should make a recommendation to the
Court as to how her fees and expenses should be allocated among the
parties, taking into consideration whether she finds responsive records
that Willis should have found but did not.
We and the court caught Fani Willis red-handed, hiding records. We’re
asking the court to appoint a special master because Willis simply can’t
be trusted to come clean on her office’s political collusion with the
Pelosi January 6 committee to ‘get Trump.
We have several FOIA lawsuits on the lawfare targeting Trump.
In February 2024, the Department of Justice asked a
federal court to allow the agency to keep secret the names of top staffers
working in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office that is targeting former
President Donald Trump and other Americans.
(Before his appointment to investigate and prosecute Trump, Special
Counsel Jack Smith previously was at the center of several controversial
issues, the IRS
scandal among them. In 2014, a Judicial Watch investigation revealed
that top IRS officials had been in communication with Jack Smith’s
then-Public Integrity Section about a plan to launch criminal
investigations into conservative tax-exempt groups. Read more here.)
In January 2024, we filed a lawsuit against
Fulton County, Georgia, for records regarding the hiring of Nathan Wade as
a special prosecutor by District Attorney Fani Willis. Wade was hired to
pursue unprecedented criminal investigations and prosecutions against
former President Trump and others over the 2020 election disputes.
In October 2023, we sued the
DOJ for records and communications between the Office of U.S. Special
Counsel Jack Smith and the Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney’s
office regarding requests/receipt of federal funding/assistance in the
investigation of former President Trump and his 18 codefendants in
the Fulton
County indictment of August 14, 2023. To date, the DOJ is refusing
to confirm or deny the existence of records, claiming that to do so would
interfere with enforcement proceedings. Our litigation challenging this is
continuing.
Through the New York Freedom of Information Law, in July 2023, we
received the engagement
letter showing New York County District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg
paid $900 per hour for partners and $500 per hour for associates to the
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher law firm for the purpose of suing Rep. Jim Jordan
(R-OH) in an effort to shut down the House Judiciary Committee’s
oversight investigation into Bragg’s unprecedented indictment of former
President Donald Trump.
$200 Million Program Giving Illegal Alien Minors Free Lawyers
Reinstated
We’re not sure why the Trump administration has decided to continue
funding a leftist group representing illegal minors.
Our Corruption Chronicles blog reports.
A few days after suspending a $200 million annual program that provides
illegal immigrant minors with free legal assistance, the Trump
administration reinstated it and American taxpayer dollars will continue
flowing to the leftist group that helps represent tens of thousands who
have entered our country illegally. Little information is available
involving the abrupt about face, why in the middle of drastic cuts to the
U.S. federal workforce the administration has chosen to continue funding a
controversial initiative that benefits illegal aliens. It is part of abillion-dollar
commitment launched in 2022 by a Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) agency known as Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) to
legally represent underage migrants, known as Unaccompanied Alien Children
(UAC), who cross the border without a parent. Over 600,000 UAC have crossed
illegally into the U.S. through Mexico since 2019 and Uncle Sam spends
hundreds of millions of dollars to house, educate, feed, entertain and
medically treat them.
The Biden administration extended the services to legal representation,
a costly benefit the Trump administration rightfully revoked only to
quietly restore it days later. The money, a couple hundred million
annually, goes to theAcacia
Center for Justice, a Washington D.C. nonprofit that partners with a
national network of human rights defenders to provide legal defense to
immigrants at risk of detention or deportation. “Acacia envisions a
nation with a transformed immigration system that embodies freedom from
detention, due process, and equal protection, where every person facing the
prospect of exile and community separation has access to meaningful legal
defense,” the group writes on its website, which assures its network of
attorneys fight for all immigrants regardless of gender identity, sexual
orientation, race or previous interaction with the criminal system.
The center’s executive director, Shaina Aber, celebrated the speedy
reinstatement of the government’s multi-million-dollar UAC defense
program, saying in a press
release that “it is unconscionable” that children who arrive
in the U.S. unaccompanied by parents or legal guardians should be forced to
represent themselves in immigration court against a trained government
attorney in an adversarial hearing before a judge, without even a
child-friendly orientation or understanding of their legal options. “We
welcome the news that the stop-work order on Acacia’s Unaccompanied
Children Program has been lifted,” Aber said. “We will continue working
alongside the Department of Health and Human Services to ensure that these
critical services upholding the basic due process rights of vulnerable
children are fully restored and our partners in the legal field–legal
lifelines safeguarding the rights and well-being of children seeking
safety–can resume their work without future disruption or delay.”
Ironically, it does not always end well for UAC — overwhelmingly
males over the age of 14 mostly from Guatemala, Honduras and
Mexico—who are allowed to stay in the U.S. Under Biden the government
failed to monitor hundreds of thousands of the underage migrants, putting
them at high risk for trafficking, exploitation or forced labor. This may
seem just as “unconscionable” as forcing the young migrants to
represent themselves in immigration court, as the leftist attorney whose
group is receiving millions from the government claims. A mainstream
newspaper even published a scathing
in-depth piece slamming the Biden administration for losing track
of at least 85,000 illegal immigrant minors who ended up in dangerous jobs
that violate the nation’s child labor laws, including in factories that
make products for well-known American brands. A federal
audit subsequently revealed that tens of thousands of UAC vanished
from the government’s radar and that hundreds of thousands go
unmonitored.
The government’s UAC program has for years been rocked by many other
problems that have put underage migrants at risk, including physical and
sexual abuse at U.S.-funded shelters. In 2021 Judicial Watch obtainedrecords from
HHS documenting 33 incidents of physical and sexual abuse during a
one-month period at shelters where the government houses UAC until they are
relocated with a sponsor. That year an HHS
Inspector General report blasted the agency for failing to protect
UAC from sexual misconduct at the facilities. Last summer the U.S.sued a
nonprofit it has paid billions of dollars to house migrant youths for
sexually abusing them for years. The Texas-based nonprofit, Southwest Key,
is the government’s largest housing provider for illegal immigrant minors
and operates 29 shelters. In its federal complaint the Justice Department
claims the children the government pays it to shelter are raped, sexually
abused, and harassed.
Soros Group Sues Trump for Cutting Aid to Soros Funded
Nonprofit
George Soros and his minions certainly know how to use the courts, and
they’re at it again as President Trump shuts off the tax dollars they
have been receiving. Our Corruption Chronicles blog has
the details.
Highlighting the need to crack down on waste at the nation’s famously
corrupt global aid agency, a group funded by leftwing billionaire George
Soros is suing the Trump administration for freezing the funds of another
nonprofit, also bankrolled by Soros, that receives millions of dollars from
the from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
With a massive budget of around $40 billion, the agency has for years come
under fire for the outrageous programs it funds with taxpayer dollars,
including hundreds of millions to promote Soros’
radical globalist agenda in Latin America, a failed Clinton-backed
port and power plant in Haiti, a project to help Asians
learn enough English to work in offshore call centers and develop
a Pakistani version of the iconic educational children’s program Sesame
Street. Other USAID allocations have paid for a condom strategy in
Eswatini, bicycles for rural communities in sub-Saharan Africa and racial
equity. Vice President Kamala Harris’failed
multi-million-dollar venture to curb “irregular migration” was
also funded through USAID.
Fortunately for American taxpayers, President Trump froze USAID
disbursements on day one while his administration identifies problems, and
the move has caused outrage among liberals and their allies in the
mainstream media. Now two leftist entities that despise the president and
promote agendas that clearly contradict his policies are suing him,
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and others in the administration for
finally stopping the highly questionable flow of taxpayer dollars into
their coffers. A lawsuit filed
this month in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia
accuses the president and his administration of “illegally and
unconscionably” freezing funding and work related to nearly every U.S.
foreign assistance mission. By freezing foreign aid, President Trump has
exceeded his constitutional authority with his unlawful actions that are
harming and will harm countless individuals and entities, the complaint
alleges.
The lawsuit was filed by a group called Public Citizen that has received
$2.46 million from Soros’ Open Society Foundations (OSF) since 2020,
records uncovered by Judicial Watch reveal. The Washington D.C.-based group
describes itself as a consumer advocacy organization that champions the
public interest in the halls of power. “We defend democracy, resist
corporate power, and fight to ensure that government works for the people
– not big corporations,” according to its website. Public
Citizen’s lead attorney in the case, Lauren Bateman, claims the
“Trump administration’s freeze on foreign assistance funding is
dangerous and illegal. She added that “when programs like the ones run by
our clients are abruptly shuttered, the impacts are felt throughout the
world—with the most vulnerable people bearing the deadliest
impact.”
One of those plaintiffs is a Soros project called Journalism Development
Network (JDN), which received $4.4
million from OSF in 2023 alone, according to records uncovered by
Judicial Watch. The Maryland-based nonprofit that claims to support a
global consortium of journalists has also received over $6.5
million from the State Department and USAID since 2020. JDN is the
corporate name of the vehemently anti-Trump Organized
Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and the two operate under
the same Employee Identification Number (EIN) in official Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) records obtained by Judicial Watch. A JDN spokesperson called
the funding cut an illegal action that deprives small investigative media
in low-income countries the funds they desperately need to operate. The
recently filed lawsuit has another plaintiff, a New York-based nonprofit
calledAIDS
Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC) that strives for a world without
AIDS and with global health equity.
USAID has authority under federal law and the terms of foreign aid
contracts to stop payments, Deputy Administrator Peter Marocco writes in a
court document filed
in the case. The agency took action to ensure funds are not being used for
fraudulent purposes and it will continue to examine outgoing payments,
Marocco writes. “Historically, USAID had limited, and insufficient
payments control or review mechanisms,” the court filing reads.
“Certifying officers pushed out payments—or grantees directly drew down
on letters of credit or other facilities—and the system automatically
processed those payments, without sufficient opportunity for payments
integrity or program review. Under that legacy system, USAID employees were
unable to adequately identify basic information about specific payments,
such as the programs with which specific payments were associated. After
Trump’s order halting foreign aid funding USAID staff were unable to
identify which payments were associated with particular enumerated accounts
or programs, Marocco further reveals. “These system deficiencies and
inability to provide complete information led to serious questions about
waste, fraud, abuse, and even illegal payments,” the filing states.
“The lack of sufficiently effective controls of an integrated payments
review process has led to significant payment delays in some cases and has
placed certain USAID programs at risk of catastrophic failure.”
Until next week,

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