Roger Rogoff is sworn in as U.S. attorney for Washington’s Western District and is fired by Donald Trump less than an hour later, according to reports from The New Republic and The Guardian. Rogoff, a former King County Superior Court judge and prosecutor, is appointed unanimously by a panel of federal judges after the prior situation in the district remains unresolved through the usual presidential and Senate nomination process. Neil Floyd had been serving in the role as interim U.S. attorney and later as first assistant U.S. attorney, after he was not formally advanced for Senate consideration. Under federal law, when the president and acting attorney general do not fill the vacancy within 120 days, district judges can appoint a U.S. attorney.
Both outlets describe Rogoff as waiting to meet with Floyd at the U.S. District Courthouse when he receives an email notifying him he has been removed. Rogoff says legal action is being considered or pursued by his representatives. The reporting also places the episode within a wider pattern, citing earlier abrupt firings in other U.S. attorney positions connected to the same district and separate concerns raised by legal and bar associations about separation-of-powers issues.