Federal agents descended on the Portsmouth district office of Virginia state Sen. L. Louise Lucas Today as part of a corruption investigation, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly.
The FBI confirmed only that it was executing a court-authorized search warrant in Portsmouth and that there was no threat to public safety. No charges have been filed and no further details have been made publicly available.
Lucas, 82, is the president pro tempore of the Virginia Senate, making her the highest-ranking woman and the first African American to hold that position in the chamber’s history. She has served as a state senator for 34 years.
Lucas cannabis business drawn into the federal probe
The search extended beyond the senator’s office. Agents were also seen entering and exiting a cannabis outlet adjacent to the office, a business Lucas co-owns that she opened in 2021 to sell legal hemp and CBD products. Virginia has legalized marijuana possession, but recreational retail sales remain illegal in the state. It was not immediately clear whether the business was a central focus of the investigation or part of a broader evidence-gathering effort.
Separately, FBI agents were observed at a CBD shop on Granby Street in Norfolk on the same day. Authorities have not confirmed whether that search is connected to the Portsmouth investigation or whether Lucas has any ties to the Norfolk location.
Search warrants of this scope typically involve the collection of documents, financial records and electronic materials. Officials have not outlined what specifically they were seeking.
Political context shadows the Lucas investigation
Virginia House Speaker Don Scott said he was deeply troubled by what he witnessed Wednesday, though he urged caution before drawing conclusions. The Democrat said far more information was needed before the situation could be properly assessed, and that the day had produced more speculation than established fact.
Several Virginia Democrats moved quickly to raise concerns about the broader context surrounding the raid. The search comes as the FBI and Justice Department have pursued a series of politically charged investigations against figures perceived as adversaries of President Donald Trump. Last week, federal prosecutors charged former FBI Director James Comey over an Instagram post that officials characterized as threatening toward Trump. A separate mortgage fraud case, later dismissed by a court, targeted New York Attorney General Letitia James, who had pursued major civil fraud litigation against Trump and his company. Federal agents also seized ballots and election materials from Fulton County, Georgia, as part of ongoing election-related inquiries.
U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott said that political context could not be ignored.
Lucas led Virginia’s redistricting push
The timing of the federal activity carries particular weight given Lucas’s central role in Virginia’s redistricting effort. In April, Virginia voters approved a Democrat-backed constitutional amendment authorizing new U.S. House district maps. The plan could position Democrats to pick up as many as four additional seats in Congress.
Lucas was one of the most prominent voices behind that push, and publicly vowed after voters approved the maps that no attempt to tilt the political system would go unanswered. Trump denounced the referendum results.
The Virginia Supreme Court allowed the referendum to proceed but has not yet ruled on whether the underlying effort is legally valid. A lower court judge ruled the amendment invalid, finding that lawmakers violated procedural requirements, and that ruling is now under appeal.
The redistricting wave began when Trump urged Texas Republicans to redraw congressional lines ahead of the midterms. California Democrats responded in kind, and similar battles spread rapidly across the country.
A long legacy before the federal spotlight found Lucas
Before the cameras and the FBI vehicles, Lucas built a career rooted in Portsmouth. In the 1980s, she became the first Black woman elected to a city council seat in her hometown. Earlier still, she was the first female shipfitter at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, a physically demanding trade involving the construction and repair of large metal assemblies for naval vessels.
In recent years, she has led a Portsmouth company that provides housing, day programs and transportation services for adults with intellectual disabilities.
Lucas did not respond to requests for comment Today and has not issued a public statement.

