1. Rep. Chris Collins of New York -- The
first person to endorse Trump in Congress was indicted this month on insider trading charges, which he denies.
2. Rep. Duncan Hunter of California -- The San Diego congressman was Trump's second backer in Congress in 2016.
He was charged Tuesday along with his wife with misusing campaign funds for personal expenses.
3. Rep. Scott DesJarlais of Tennessee -- He's still a congressman and has not recently been plagued by scandal or charged with a crime -- but DesJarlais has weathered plenty of criticism. He's been re-elected several times since,
but in 2014 it came out that the anti-abortion Republican had urged a woman he impregnated to get an abortion.
4. Rep. Tom Marino of Pennsylvania -- He's also still in Congress, but Marino was intended to be the country's drug czar after Trump nominated him. Marino had to pull out of consideration, however, after an investigation by The Post and "60 Minutes."
According to CNN's report at the time: "The newspaper and the CBS newsmagazine documented how Marino helped drug distributors pass an industry-friendly law" that hobbled the Drug Enforcement Administration's efforts to halt the spread of the opioid crisis. "Marino took nearly $100,000 from the pharmaceutical lobby while advocating for the law," the CNN report said.
5. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama -- He could have been the success story of the Trump caucus as attorney general. But while Sessions has faithfully executed Trump's policies, he fell out of favor with the President for recusing himself from the Russia investigation. That makes Sessions directly responsible for special counsel Robert Mueller, a move from which it'll be hard to recover. Trump has
frequently criticized Sessions, who as a result lives under a sort of Trumpian sword of Damocles, knowing he could be fired at any moment.