Get PolitiFact in your inbox.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, right, and President Donald Trump during a visit to a Federal Reserve construction site on July 24, 2025. (AP)
When Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell said Jan. 11 he is being criminally investigated by the federal government, President Donald Trump told NBC News, "I don’t know anything about it."
Trump could have been in the dark about the specifics of the Justice Department investigation — approved in November by United States Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro, The New York Times reported — but he has been clear about his desire to oust Powell.
The investigation focuses on Powell’s oversight of the bank’s headquarters renovation. The Federal Reserve has been undergoing building renovations since 2021 on a project first approved in Trump’s first term. The $2.5 billion cost is about $600 million over the original budget, because of design changes, higher costs and more asbestos than anticipated.
The investigation is the most dramatic escalation of long-simmering tensions between Trump and Powell, who the president initially tapped for the top Fed job but who has since drawn Trump’s ire with his go-slow approach on lowering interest rates.
Trump said at a Dec. 29 press conference with Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu that his team was weighing a "a gross incompetence lawsuit" against Powell.
Trump might have been referring to a claim of "gross negligence," which can be pursued in either civil or criminal law, depending on its severity.
That’s different from the criminal investigation launched against Powell. That addresses whether he lied to Congress about the cost and scope of the renovations.
Powell’s term as chair ends in May, but he can remain as a Fed governor through January 2028.
"No one — certainly not the chair of the Federal Reserve — is above the law," Powell said in a video statement. "But this unprecedented action should be seen in the broader context of the administration’s threats and ongoing pressure."
The White House did not respond to our request for comment.
The investigation into Powell aligns with other Trump administration efforts to prosecute the president’s adversaries, including former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. Both prosecutions have experienced setbacks with grand juries declining to indict or judicial rulings in the defendants’ favor.
In a September Truth Social post, Trump directly addressed Attorney General Pam Bondi, urging her to step up the Justice Department’s prosecutorial efforts, including against Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. He wrote, in all caps, "Justice must be served, now!"
Trump also moved to fire another Fed governor, Lisa Cook, citing a "criminal referral" from Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte, a Trump appointee, relating to mortgage fraud. Cook has challenged her firing, and her court case is proceeding.
Trump’s Dec. 29 remarks are the clearest he made about using the legal system to oust Powell.
In his second term, Trump has often called for Powell to resign and frequently attacked him:
-
On April 17, 2025: "I’m not happy with him. I let him know it and, oh, if I want him out, he’ll be out of there real fast."
-
On June 18, 2025: "We have a stupid person, frankly, at the Fed."
-
On July 13, 2025: "Jerome Powell's been very bad for our country."
-
On July 15, 2025: "You talk to the guy, it's like talking to a nothing. It's like talking to a chair. No personality, no high intelligence, no nothing."
-
On July 22, 2025: "I was very nice to him at the beginning because I know how to sell and, you know, at a certain point it didn’t matter anymore because the guy is just not a smart person."
-
On Aug 1, 2025: Powell is "a stubborn MORON."
-
On Aug. 13, 2025 and Sept. 20, 2025: Powell is "incompetent."
-
On Nov. 18, 2025 and Dec. 9, 2025: Powell is "a stupid man" and "not a smart guy."
If the Justice Department is able to convict Powell, it could satisfy the narrow grounds for removing the Fed chair, which can be done "for cause by the President." This refers to "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office," according to a Supreme Court decision about the Federal Trade Commission.
In a May decision that allowed the president to fire members of independent commissions, the Supreme Court noted that the ruling didn’t affect the Fed, which it called "a uniquely structured, quasi-private entity."
Peter Conti-Brown, a University of Pennsylvania professor of financial regulation, told PolitiFact in July that Powell could argue that leveraging the renovation budget is a "pretext" for his firing — a legal term used to describe a false reason an employer gives for firing an employee in order to cover the real reason.
"Courts evaluating any attempted removal after the fact will assess both the animus and pretext very heavily against President Trump," Conti-Brown said.
Powell, in his video response, called the investigatory inquiries "pretexts" that mask the real reason for the administration’s desire to oust him, which is the dispute over setting interest rates.
Our Sources
NBC News, "'I don't know anything about it': Trump denies involvement in DOJ's Fed subpoenas," Jan. 11, 2026
Jerome Powell, video statement, Jan. 11, 2026
Donald Trump, remarks at a press conference with Benjamin Netanyahu, Dec. 29, 2025
Donald Trump, Truth Social post, Sept. 20, 2025
Donald Trump, Truth Social post, Aug. 25, 2025
Donald Trump, remarks on April 17, 2025, June 18, 2025, July 13, 2025, July 15, 2025, July 22, 2025, Aug 1, 2025, Aug. 13, 2025, Sept. 20, 2025, Nov. 18, 2025 and Dec. 9, 2025
Federal Reserve Board, "Federal Reserve’s Renovation of Two Historic Buildings," accessed Jan. 12, 2025
Legal Information Institute, definition of "gross negligence," accessed Jan. 12, 2026
Brookings Institution, "Why is the Federal Reserve independent, and what does that mean in practice?" Dec. 12, 2025
New York Times, "How Trump’s Attacks on the Fed Chair Have Intensified," July 24, 2025
New York Times, "Federal Prosecutors Open Investigation Into Fed Chair Powell," Jan. 11, 2026
New York Times, "The Renovations Fueling Trump’s Attacks on the Fed," July 24, 2025
Associated Press, "How Trump could use a building renovation to oust Fed Chair Powell," July 16, 2025
PolitiFact, "Donald Trump appointed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Can he fire him?" July 17, 2025
PolitiFact, "Lisa Cook is fighting President Donald Trump’s plan to fire her. What comes next?" Aug. 26, 2025