DOJ to Allow Hiring of US Prosecutors Straight Out of Law School
Source: Bloomberg Law
Exclusive
DOJ to Allow Hiring of US Prosecutors Straight Out of Law School
March 16, 2026, 5:04 PM EDT
Ben Penn
Senior Reporter
The Justice Department has waived a policy requiring newly hired federal prosecutors to possess at least one year of experience practicing law, as US attorneys offices struggle to find qualified replacements following mass departures.
Many offices have previously adopted their own rules mandating at least three years of legal practice, rather than the nationwide baseline threshold of one year. But the reduced standards this month would allow federal districts such as Minnesota and Southern Florida that have experienced significant attrition to put new prosecutors to work straight out of law school.
The move was confirmed by two people familiar with the matter and reflected in newly-posted online vacancy announcements in at least a handful of offices.
The postings for assistant US attorney openings in Minnesota, South Florida, Montana, Alaska, and Louisiana, list a law degree and active state bar membership as required qualifications. They dont mention a minimum period of service, while other US attorneys offices still mandate at least one or three years out of law school.
{snip}
To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Penn in Washington at bpenn@bloomberglaw.com
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Seth Stern at sstern@bloomberglaw.com
Read more: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/doj-to-allow-hiring-of-us-prosecutors-straight-out-of-law-school
@kenwhite.bsky.social
It is outrageous to hire people into the incredibly powerful and meaningful position of AUSA right out of law school. They should clerk for a year.
National Security Counselors 🕵
@nationalsecuritylaw.org
· 1h
Call them the Bondi Youth
DOJ to Allow Hiring of US Prosecutors Straight Out of Law School
The Justice Department has waived a policy requiring newly hired federal prosecutors to possess at least one year of experience practicing law, as US attorneys offices struggle to find qualified repl...
news.bloomberglaw.com
5:44 PM · Mar 16, 2026
It is outrageous to hire people into the incredibly powerful and meaningful position of AUSA right out of law school. They should clerk for a year.
— Ransacked Hat (@kenwhite.bsky.social) 2026-03-16T21:44:54.132Z
bucolic_frolic
(54,910 posts)Everything is getting worse, degrading. Experience matters. Or it did.
underpants
(196,209 posts)yeah who cares about experience?
walkingman
(10,748 posts)sheshe2
(97,290 posts)she is under the bar most days.
annabanana
(52,804 posts)Anyone fool enough to TAKE a job with this DOJ had better have some kind of night gig...
Marie Marie
(11,216 posts)underpants
(196,209 posts)as well as up and comers who post on social media.
Minnesota sounds more like a target rather than alleviating workload.
msongs
(73,629 posts)Buddyzbuddy
(2,499 posts)Of course they have to get through that tough screening process. "Do you promise to call the President, daddy? And to kiss his big fat ugly arse all day, everyday, and do everything just as you're told to without thought no matter if it's unethical or illegal?"
Yes, then your in.
Skittles
(171,361 posts)YES INDEED
edited to add: it would appear the Trump Whore pool is getting smaller and smaller
Mysterian
(6,400 posts)No knowledge of the constitution required.