DA Details His Investigations Plans Follow The End Of Trump Admin
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner’s latest outburst over immigration enforcement has pushed an already heated national debate into even darker territory.
After publicly lashing out at ICE agents in rhetoric that likened them to Nazis, Krasner went a step further, signaling his intent to use state-level prosecutions as a workaround to prevent any potential presidential pardons. The move is not merely provocative; it reflects a broader pattern of politicized lawfare that has become increasingly visible in recent years.
Philadelphia’s Soros-backed DA Larry Krasner just held a zoom call with other blue state prosecutors to devise a plan to prosecute ICE agents on state charges once Trump leaves office:
“The president cannot pardon them period!”
Just plain Bolshevik stuff.pic.twitter.com/YxRd7YvRjV
— johnny maga (@_johnnymaga) January 28, 2026
Rather than an isolated incident, Krasner’s remarks read like an ideological sequel to the failed Georgia prosecution of Donald Trump, where sweeping rhetoric and aggressive legal theories ultimately collapsed under scrutiny.
In both cases, the throughline is the same: prosecutors framing political opposition as criminality itself, then justifying extraordinary actions as moral necessity. What emerges is not a sober discussion about immigration policy, but an alarming willingness to target law enforcement officers for doing exactly what federal law requires of them.
Scott Jennings just CALLED OUT Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner for saying he would hunt down ICE officers “like Nazis.”
Then @ScottJenningsKY laid out the bigger picture in Minnesota.
This isn’t about one city.
This is about federal immigration law, which is working everywhere… pic.twitter.com/48crBs5hWR
— Overton (@overton_news) January 29, 2026
That concern was voiced forcefully this week by CNN commentator Scott Jennings, who criticized Krasner’s rhetoric as wildly inappropriate. Jennings underscored a point that often gets lost amid the shouting: federal immigration law already exists, and ICE agents are duly sworn officers ordered by the president to enforce it.
In most jurisdictions, those laws are carried out without drama, with routine cooperation between agencies and orderly transfers of custody. The system, while controversial, functions within established legal boundaries.
23% of ICE officers are Hispanic
17% of ICE officers are black
But ok https://t.co/xkJBParQtb
— Lydia Moynihan (@LydiaMoynihan) January 30, 2026
The problem, Jennings argued, arises when local officials decide that federal law simply does not apply within their jurisdictions. From there, the rhetoric escalates, and enforcement becomes framed not as public service, but as moral evil. Krasner’s comments, combined with similar threats from other prominent Democrats, represent a significant escalation—one that blurs the line between political disagreement and intimidation. Comparing federal agents to Nazis or promising to “hunt them down” is not protest; it is an attempt to delegitimize the rule of law itself.
