Local News
Gilbert Remains Silent on Sudden Resignation as Western District of Virginia U.S. Attorney After Just 5 Weeks on Job
Royal Examiner has thus far unsuccessfully tried to contact recently resigned U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia Todd Gilbert. As has been extensively reported after his appointment by Trump Administration Attorney General Pam Bondi and swearing in on July 14, 2025, staunch Republican Gilbert announced his resignation on Wednesday, August 20th.
The only comment attributed to Gilbert that we came across so far was referenced in an August 21st story by Mason Willett at WHSV in Harrisonburg, which cited a Gilbert post on his “X” account, apparently referencing a character Ron Burgundy from the movie “Anchorman” that said, “Boy, that escalated quickly.”
To our knowledge what “escalated quickly” in Todd Gilbert’s work world a day short of five weeks as U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia remains unknown other than to those directly involved in the hiring and/or resignation processes.
While declining to speculate about the involved circumstances, asked about Gilbert’s sudden departure from a position he commented at the time of his swearing in five weeks earlier that he was “honored to serve” in, former colleagues concurred that Gilbert is “a man of principal”.

This U.S. Attorney’s Office website photo of Todd Gilbert’s July 14 swearing in to the position of U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia appears to be a family affair.
Bipartisan Support
Unlike the opposition public reaction to many Trump Administration appointments, Gilbert had been anticipated to be an excellent fit with the credentials to back that “excellent” appraisal up from both sides of the poltical aisle. Not even Virginia’s two Democratic U.S. Senators Tim Kaine and John Warner voiced any opposition to the appointment. In fact, a joint release from both Senators offices expressed surprise, with perhaps even a hint of disappointment, to Gilbert’s announced resignation:
“The senators were surprised to learn this news. After a thorough interview process that included the input of a bipartisan panel of former Virginia U.S. attorneys and other well-respected members of the Virginia legal community, the senators recommended two candidates. Todd Gilbert was among them because he was exceptionally qualified to execute the duties of this role.
“On background, the senators recommended both Todd Gilbert and Robert Tracci for the WDVA position. They announced their recommendations on April 3, 2025” — https://www.kaine.senate.gov/press-releases/04/03/2025/warner-and-kaine-announce-recommendations-for-us-attorneys-for-the-eastern-and-western-districts-of-virginia
Included in Gilbert’s resume was his most recent service of 19 years, 2006 to this summer of 2025, in the Virginia House of Representatives, where he served two years as Republican House Speaker. Prior to that he had stints in the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office in, not only Warren, but Frederick and Shenandoah Counties, as well as the City of Lynchburg. All four are in Virginia’s Western District.
Just five weeks ago
In a press release issued by the U.S. Attorney’s Office at the time of his July 14th swearing in Gilbert expressed pride and professional satisfaction in the appointment:
“I am honored to serve as the United States Attorney for the Western District of Virginia … In my heart, I have always been a prosecutor and to return to that role now is the opportunity of a lifetime. My wife and I have spent our lives in the Western District and to play a part in keeping it safe is a privilege. I look forward to working with all our state, local, and federal law enforcement partners to make the Western District of Virginia safer for all its residents.”
As to the job he was appointed to in July that U.S. Attorney’s Office release noted that, “As the United States Attorney, Mr. Gilbert serves as the chief federal law enforcement officer in the Western District of Virginia, responsible for representing the United States in all civil and criminal litigation. U.S. Attorney Gilbert leads an office of nearly 30 federal prosecutors and support staff.”
As to his background related to his appointment the U.S. Attorney’s Office release added, “A core focus of Mr. Gilbert’s legislative experience was in the area of public safety … He was named Legislator of the Year by the Virginia Sheriff’s Association, the Virginia State Police Association and the Virginia Association of Chiefs of Police.”
As to his personal ties to the district he was appointed to represent, the U.S. Attorney’s Office release added, “U.S. Attorney Gilbert and his family have deep ties to the Western District of Virginia. He was raised in the Shenandoah Valley and graduated from the University of Virginia and the Southern Methodist University School of Law where he served as president of the Student Bar Association …”
The U.S. Attorney’s Office release also notes population and area statistics for the Western District of Virginia: “The Western District of Virginia comprises approximately sixty percent of the land area in the Commonwealth of Virginia and approximately 2.2 million of its citizens. The district covers a large geographic area. While the northern corner is less than fifty miles from Washington D.C., Lee County, the western tip of the district, is farther west than Detroit and is closer to six other state capitols than it is to Richmond.”
And a positive personal recollection
This reporter recalls casual political perspective conversations with Gilbert in the Warren County Courthouse during his tenure in the Commonwealth Attorney’s Office here. Our perspectives on the national political scene were regularly at odds, often leaving both of us shaking our heads at the other’s perspective at a conversation’s conclusion.
However, neither of us took those opposing viewpoints personally and could even later joke about them and remain on professional speaking terms without a problem.
So, it would seem from all angles, Virginia and its Shenandoah Valley have lost out in Gilbert’s resignation. And as to the impetus for that resignation, it remains a professional, personal, and perhaps political, mystery.
But in an age of legal and political, not to mention Constitutional, mysteries, perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised by this unexpected turn of events. But you also know what the everwise “they” say — “Inquiring minds want to know.”
So, we’ll keep digging for answers and let you know if we find any.
