
June 28, 2021
Mar 16, 2026
Editorial credit: Shuterstock
The administration's efforts included intimidating and coercing lawyers and law firms through the issuance of a series of punitive executive orders and memoranda issued against individual law firms, which led nine law firms to enter into settlement agreements with the administration to avoid these executive orders or to have them rescinded.
“One of the first things the Trump administration did was to target some of our nation’s largest law firms to prevent them from joining any legal challenges to the Administration’s illegal agenda,” said Virginia Canter, chief counsel and director of ethics and anti-corruption at Democracy Defenders Fund. “Our democracy relies on the freedom of lawyers to represent organizations and individuals of their choice, without fear of retaliation by the federal government. Boris Epshteyn appears to have played a critical - yet, highly secretive - role in this pressure campaign. It is imperative that there is transparency regarding these efforts and that he is held accountable for any possible violations he may have committed while trying to intimidate these firms and the legal community as a whole.”
The complaint details Epshteyn’s apparent role in the effort, alleging that he personally led settlement negotiations on behalf of the Administration and later participated in additional negotiations in which at least one firm agreed to provide unpaid work for the Administration.
“Lawyers need to stand together in defense of our profession and our justice system,” stated Mark Friedman, a principal author of the ethics complaint and a volunteer with Lawyers Defending American Democracy. “This administration's efforts to silence law firms are among the most egregious actions they have taken. That a lawyer may have led this activity in violation of the ethics of his profession is something that needs to be examined."


All Rights Reserved. © 2026
General Inquiries • Press Inquiries • Follow on: LinkedIn • Instagram • Bluesky • Facebook