John Bolton has reached a plea deal with federal prosecutors in the classified-documents prosecution against him and is expected to plead guilty, two people familiar with the negotiations said. The former national security adviser was charged in 2025 for mishandling classified material while writing an unflattering memoir of
Donald Trump's first term, Deutsche Welle reported, and the Guardian reported the Justice Department had filed the case as part of what its coverage described as an onslaught against the president's critics.
What is Bolton pleading to? Bolton is expected to plead guilty on the underlying charges of mishandling classified material in connection with the memoir manuscript, the BBC reported. The plea agreement was reached with prosecutors ahead of an anticipated court hearing, with sentencing terms not yet made public.
Why was the case brought? DOJ filed the charges in 2025 over Bolton's handling of classified documents during the writing of his
Trump-administration memoir, Deutsche Welle reported. The prosecution was framed in liberal-press coverage as part of a broader DOJ effort against
Trump critics under Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, the Guardian reported.
Where does this leave Bolton publicly? Bolton has been one of the more visible Republican-aligned critics of
Trump since leaving the National Security Council, with recent appearances including his Friday call on the proposed Iran framework as "a big defeat for the United States" carried by The Hill. The plea trims his exposure to prison time but closes the door on the memoir-source defence he had reportedly intended to mount at trial, the BBC reported.
What's the political read? Bolton's plea forecloses a high-profile trial that would have put the DOJ-versus-critics frame on the public record for weeks, the Guardian reported. The plea outcome avoids the optics of a fully-litigated critic-prosecution case running through the 2026 midterm cycle.
Does this close the broader DOJ thread? Other
Trump-administration-critic prosecutions remain on the docket, including the James Comey criminal case where the lead prosecutor stepped away last weekend. The Bolton plea trims one of the more prominent open files without resolving the wider question of which charges DOJ continues to pursue.
Figures referenced: Donald Trump. — JudgeMarket.