FBI, DEA, ATF staffing fell amid crime crackdown

Summary

Reuters records showed staffing declines across major Justice Department agencies during Trump’s second term.

Why this matters

The staffing reductions affected agencies responsible for terrorism, drug trafficking, gun crimes, civil rights, and prisons. The figures offer a detailed look at how workforce cuts and unfilled jobs coincided with shifting Justice Department priorities.

Staffing fell by more than 4,000 at several top U.S. law enforcement agencies during the Trump administration, according to Justice Department records obtained by Reuters, even as the administration pledged to crack down on crime.

The records, from the department’s management unit and obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, showed FBI staffing fell by more than 7% since the 2024 fiscal year, a loss of about 2,600 employees. Staffing at the Drug Enforcement Administration fell about 6%, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives lost about 14% of its workers.

Other Justice Department units saw steeper declines. The National Security Division, which handles intelligence and terrorism matters, lost nearly 38% of its staff, according to the records. Its most recent budget request to Congress cited “unprecedented personnel constraints” in the unit handling espionage and sensitive military technology export cases.

The records showed the Justice Department employed about 107,000 people as of early April, roughly 11,200 fewer than in the fiscal year that ended three months before Trump began his second term. About 7,000 positions were unfilled.

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