Taxpayers May Be Forced To Cover Legal Fees For NY AG Letitia James Amid Fraud Probe
New York taxpayers could soon find themselves footing the legal bill for Attorney General Letitia James as she prepares to defend herself against a federal investigation into alleged mortgage and real estate fraud. Buried in New Yorkโs newly approved operations budget is language that opens a $10 million fund to reimburse state officials โ including James โ for โreasonable attorneysโ fees and expensesโ tied to investigations launched by the federal government after January 1, 2025.
Though the budget provision does not mention James by name, sources familiar with the matter confirmed to The New York Post that the fund was included with her case in mind. The fund could also apply to other state officials targeted by a Trump administration-led Department of Justice as it reopens investigations into political and institutional corruption.
The controversy stems from a criminal referral issued last month by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), whose director, William Pulte, accused James of falsifying mortgage documents and misrepresenting her residency status. According to the referral sent to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, James claimed a Virginia home โ allegedly purchased on behalf of her niece โ as her primary residence, a move that could constitute mortgage fraud.
James, who gained national prominence for her high-profile civil fraud case against Donald Trump, has come under scrutiny for what critics now call a double standard. Once the face of the โno one is above the lawโ mantra, she now finds herself leaning on state funds and a private legal defense to fight the allegations. A spokesperson for her office called the probe โpolitical retributionโ and vowed to fight what they characterized as a โrevenge tourโ orchestrated by Trump.
But Republicans are not buying the victim narrative.
โThis is what corruption looks like in plain sight: political insiders rigging the system to protect their own, while hardworking families get shortchanged,โ said New York GOP Chair Ed Cox. โTish James used her office to wage partisan lawfare against her political opponents, and now New Yorkers are footing the bill for the consequences.โ
Critics also slammed what they describe as a legal “bailout” hidden in plain sight. The language in the budget states that any state employee facing a federal investigation related to their duties may seek reimbursement โ a clause that could be used broadly and, according to opponents, easily abused.
The legal support fund is likely to inflame already tense debates over partisanship, misuse of public resources, and institutional trust. With New Yorkโs top law enforcement officer now potentially under federal investigation, questions will continue to mount over the ethical boundaries between public office and political warfare โ and who ends up paying the price.












