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Fortune
Fortune
Eva Roytburg

Pirro drops Powell probe, handing Kevin Warsh a lifeline, though U.S. attorney vows to restart probe ‘should the facts warrant doing so’

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 02: (L to R) U.S. President Donald Trump shakes hands with his nominee for the chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell during a press event in the Rose Garden at the White House, November 2, 2017 in Washington, DC. Current Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen's term expires in February. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images) (Credit: Drew Angerer—Getty Images)

The criminal investigation that has held the Federal Reserve chair nomination hostage for three months is over—sort of.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced Friday that her office is closing its probe into Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the central bank’s Washington headquarters renovation, punting the matter to the central bank’s inspector general.

“This morning the Inspector General for the Federal Reserve has been asked to scrutinize the building costs overruns—in the billions of dollars—that have been borne by taxpayers,” Pirro wrote on X. “The IG has the authority to hold the Federal Reserve accountable to American taxpayers.”

The decision could clear a major procedural hurdle for Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s pick to replace Powell when his term as chair expires May 15.

Sen. Thom Tillis, the North Carolina Republican who sits on the Senate Banking Committee, has vowed to block Warsh’s confirmation as long as the Department of Justice probe remained open, calling the investigation “weak” and “frivolous” and framing it as an assault on Fed independence. Republicans hold a 12–10 edge on the committee, which means Tillis’s single vote is enough to create an 11–11 deadlock and keep the nomination frozen.

Neither Tillis nor the Federal Reserve Board of Governors immediately responded to Fortune’s request for comment.

Pirro’s reversal is a surprise, and a sharp pivot. As recently as Wednesday, she told reporters she would “not back off,” and was preparing to appeal a ruling that quashed two of her subpoenas to the Fed. 

The probe centered on cost overruns for the renovation of two historic Fed buildings, which ballooned from $1.9 billion in 2023 to $2.5 billion in 2025. Powell, for his part, has said the investigation is a pressure tactic designed to force the Fed to cut interest rates faster than it believes is warranted.

Whether Pirro’s announcement resolves the underlying standoff is a different question. It could give Tillis enough reassurance to release his hold and move Warsh out of committee. But it does not obviously deliver Trump’s other priority: Powell’s early exit from the Fed Board of Governors, a seat he is entitled to hold until 2028.

Powell has said that he won’t leave until the probe is “well and truly over,” a door which Pirro left conspicuously open. 

“Note well, however, that I will not hesitate to restart a criminal investigation should the facts warrant doing so,” she wrote. 

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