Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
International

Preet Bharara's New Podcast To Take On Justice Issues, Donald Trump

IANS, 18 Sep, 2017 01:02 PM
    India-born former top US federal prosecutor, Preet Bharara, who was sacked by President Donald Trump, will launch a podcast to discuss justice and fairness issues, including the probe into the alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential polls.
     
     
    The 48-year-old attorney told USA Today that he also plans to address his firing by Trump in one of the first podcasts, "so people will understand the context from which I'm speaking."
     
     
    Bharara, an Obama-era appointee, was fired in March from his post as the US attorney for parts of New York City, including Manhattan.
     
     
    "I'm not putting anything off limits," Bharara said.
     
     
    "I'm not doing a weekly podcast to throw bombs. I'm a private citizen, I'm not special counsel Mueller," Bharara said, referring to former FBI director Robert Mueller, who's investigating Russia's suspected campaign of cyberattacks and fake news to influence the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion with Trump associates.
     
     
    A Podcast is a digital audio file made available on the Internet for downloading to a computer or mobile device, typically available as a series.
     
     
    The podcasts could present Bharara with opportunities to discuss Trump and the new administration from his perspective, the report said.
     
     
     
    "I have personal experience with how this president seems to view rule of law and law and order issues, and I have not been especially shy about that on social media," Bharara says.
     
     
    Bharara's ouster from the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, one of the nation's most powerful legal posts, has given him more leeway to speak freely, the report said.
     
     
    His new podcast series is titled "Stay Tuned With Preet" that launches on Wednesday — a winking reference to the catchphrase Bharara frequently employed to parry questions from news reporters about continuing federal investigations, the report said.
     
     
    Trump fired him and 45 other US Attorney holdovers from the Obama administration— after Bharara says he declined to return a phone call from the president, the report said

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Australian Police Launch Probe Into Assault On Indian-Origin Man

    Police in Australia’s Tasmania state on Monday said they had launched a probe into the assault on an Indian-origin man to assess whether it was a racially-motivated incident.

    Australian Police Launch Probe Into Assault On Indian-Origin Man

    Rebellion Led Indian-American Teen To $250,000 Science Prize

    Rebellion Led Indian-American Teen To $250,000 Science Prize
    A rebellion began Indian-American teen Indrani Das on her way to the brain research that got her the quarter-million-dollar Regeneron Science Talent Search award for high school students.

    Rebellion Led Indian-American Teen To $250,000 Science Prize

    Pakistani Family Pardons 10 Indians For Murdering Son In UAE; Indian Charity Deposits Blood Money

    Pakistani Family Pardons 10 Indians For Murdering Son In UAE; Indian Charity Deposits Blood Money
    The family of a Pakistani man, allegedly murdered by 10 Indians in Abu Dhabi in 2015, has pardoned the convicts facing death sentence.

    Pakistani Family Pardons 10 Indians For Murdering Son In UAE; Indian Charity Deposits Blood Money

    Muslim ban represents US' darkest era: Indian-American philanthropist

    Muslim ban represents US' darkest era: Indian-American philanthropist
    As a teenager when Fakhrul Islam, now Frank F. Islam, crossed the Atlantic in 1970 to realise his American dream, the "shining city upon a hill" opened all its doors for him, helping him become one of the most-celebrated Indian-American businessmen in the US.

    Muslim ban represents US' darkest era: Indian-American philanthropist

    Led By Us, Western Powers Boycotting Nuclear Ban Negotiations: Haley

    Western nuclear powers and 37 other countries led by Washington are boycotting the negotiations on banning nuclear weapons that began on Monday, US Permanent representative Nikki Haley announced.

    Led By Us, Western Powers Boycotting Nuclear Ban Negotiations: Haley

    Number Of Indian Applicants At US Varsities Drops This Year

    Number Of Indian Applicants At US Varsities Drops This Year
    The universities in the US have registered a decline in applications from Indian students following rising hate crimes and concerns over potential changes in visa policies by the Trump administration, according to a survey.

    Number Of Indian Applicants At US Varsities Drops This Year