Editorial: Florida's Pam Bondi showed how to weaponize justice -- and still lost her job
Published in Op Eds
Pam Bondi was loyal, turning the U.S. Department of Justice into a tool for partisan and political retribution, just as President Donald Trump intended. In the end, though, that wasn’t enough to keep her job as U.S. attorney general. Her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files no doubt played a big part in her departure.
Now Bondi gets to be the latest person to learn that appeasing Trump — as she seems to have tried to do — only goes so far.
Trump announced Bondi was leaving in a social media post Thursday, calling her “a Great American Patriot” and saying she was moving to an “important new job in the private sector.” Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, will become acting attorney general, Trump said.
Bondi, a former two-term Florida attorney general, is the second Cabinet official Trump to leave the administration in recent weeks. Previously, former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was ousted following the botched immigration enforcement actions in Minneapolis, in which two American citizens died.
During her turbulent 14-month tenure, Bondi acted as a staunch foot soldier for Trump. Under her leadership, the DOJ indicted Trump enemies like former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James — both cases were dismissed in November — and fired prosecutors who participated in criminal investigations involving the president.
In Miami last year, she fired an assistant U.S. attorney, considered a rising star, for posting critical online comments about Trump during his first term as president. That nearly upended a Medicare fraud trial in which he was the lead prosecutor, the Herald reported.
As the Herald Editorial Board wrote in November: “Where other Trump AGs reached a point where they had to push back on Trump’s worst instincts, Bondi, so far, has faithfully toed the line.”
That didn’t save her job, though. In a since-deleted September social media post, Trump appeared to criticize the DOJ for not pursuing his political enemies enough.
Trump, reportedly, also grew frustrated over the DOJ’s release of the Epstein files, which have become a political liability for the president. After Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act in November, the agency missed deadlines to release the documents, revealed victims’ names and redacted information that should have been available to the public, the Herald reported.
Perhaps the watershed moment, though, was when Bondi told Fox News last February that she had the Epstein files right on her desk to review, only to say a few months later that the files didn’t exist.
And then there was the time Bondi faced questions from a U.S. House committee in February. She pushed back, at one point calling a member of Congress “a washed up loser” — how classy!
A photo taken during that hearing symbolized the contempt with which Epstein’s victims have been treated by the justice system for years. It showed Bondi sitting in front of a group of more than a dozen victims standing up and raising their hands in response to questions from Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee. Bondi, just a few feet away, looked down at the table in front of her, her back to the women.
Despite her abrupt departure, Bondi may still have to face questions about the Epstein files. The New York Times reported she was scheduled to testify before the House Oversight Committee on April 14 but had not yet committed to appearing. U.S. Rep. Robert Garcia of California, the committee’s top Democrat, said in a statement that Bondi is still “legally obligated to appear before our committee under oath,” the Times reported.
The mishandling of the Epstein files will probably be Bondi’s legacy as America’s top prosecutor. But we cannot forget that she also helped set a precedent for the weaponization of the Justice Department, and that legacy is a dangerous one for American democracy.
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