By Michael Warren
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
Overt pressure from the president. Attorneys both in
management and at the front line in revolt. Two lower-level political
appointees—one of whom doesn’t
even work at the Department of Justice—overriding the judgment of criminal
prosecutors trying to do right by the law and ethical guidelines.
It’s hard to imagine even a Donald Trump loyalist like
Attorney General Pam Bondi holding on much longer under these conditions, with
decisions at the Justice Department increasingly happening well outside the
chain of command and undermining her authority.
Just last week, as multiple
news
outlets
reported, Bondi and her deputy, Todd Blanche, were “caught off guard” by the
indictment of New York Attorney General Letitia James on charges of bank fraud
and making false statements to a financial institution. Though these senior DOJ
leaders were expecting the indictment at some point, the newly installed acting
U.S. attorney who brought the case, Lindsey Halligan, did not inform her
superiors before presenting her case to a grand jury.
The episode was only the latest example of Bondi being
made to look like a mere apparatchik or even a redundant part of the Justice
Department. What is the power of an attorney general who doesn’t have prior
knowledge of one of the more politically charged prosecutions (so far) of the
second Trump term? How much more degradation can one Trump Cabinet member take?
The attorney general is known for being a sharp-elbowed
defender of Trump’s administration of justice, using her experience as a
frequent guest on cable news to deliver quippy lines and stinging rebukes of
the president’s opponents that cast the stakes as constitutional. Bondi has blasted
“outrageous, overzealous, unconstitutional judges” and called
the lawsuits attempting to block the Trump administration’s executive actions a
“constitutional crisis.”
And Bondi has been eager and willing to do some dirty
work for a president who views the department as his own personal legal team.
She has fired more
than a dozen DOJ officials (including the department’s top
ethics official) attached to the former special counsel who investigated
Trump, Jack Smith; defended
the department’s decision to end its criminal probe into top Trump official
Tom Homan; and threatened
to prosecute elected officials who use their “official position to obstruct
federal immigration enforcement efforts.”
But it has been Bondi’s remaining shreds of dedication to
her profession that have found her at odds with the president she serves and
the movement he represents.
For instance, after years of demands from right-wing
conspiracists to tell the true story surrounding the convictions of and suicide
by financier and child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Bondi and FBI Director
Kash Patel released
a memo in July with some underwhelming conclusions. Despite the conspiracy
theories that had even been egged
on by Bondi herself, the memo concluded that Epstein had, indeed, killed
himself in his New York prison cell in 2019, and that there was no evidence of
a supposed list of high-profile and powerful clients for whom he arranged sex
trysts with underage girls.
This memo enraged vocal
members of Trump’s base who had hoped for “transparency” on the Epstein
issue and saw Bondi as part of the greater cover-up. And Trump himself was
reportedly frustrated
with Bondi over the blowback from parts of his coalition over the Epstein
files flap.
The series of events leading up to last week’s indictment
of James has been a parade of humiliations for Bondi the career prosecutor.
It’s no coincidence that Halligan, a former defense attorney for Trump himself
who has never before worked as a prosecutor, was handpicked by the president
last month. She has succeeded the previous U.S. attorney in the Eastern
District of Virginia, Erik Siebert, who resisted
Trump’s demand to prosecute both James and the former FBI director, James
Comey. Under that pressure, he resigned.
Bondi and Blanche had worked
closely with Siebert and pushed back against his removal—he was, after all,
Trump’s nominee for the permanent job. They were not given much notice or a
chance to argue against the selection of Halligan, whom they reportedly worried
was too inexperienced. Their private worries turned out to be prescient, with
Halligan making some very basic mistakes. When returning the Comey indictment,
for instance, Halligan vexed
one federal judge by providing two contradictory documents. And in both
cases, she has made some embarrassing
errors
in the official paperwork, including listing James as living in the
non-existent “Brooklyn, NJ.”
But more important than first-timer flubs are the
apparent weaknesses of the cases against Comey and James.
Attorneys involved in the Comey probe wrote a memo
arguing there was insufficient
evidence to charge the former FBI director with lying to Congress.
Meanwhile, the criminal referral that prompted James’ indictment came from Bill
Pulte, the Trump lapdog running the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Following
that referral, the indictment
claims James committed mortgage fraud by listing a home she owns in
Norfolk, Virginia, as a second home to get a better rate, when instead she has
been using that home as investment property and rents it to a family. The New
York Times, however, reported
that the Norfolk home is actually occupied by James’s grandniece, who testified
under oath in a separate matter that she does not pay rent. Given the
flimsiness of the indictments themselves and the paucity of known evidence,
it’s hard to see how prosecutors can soundly obtain a conviction.
And that seems to have been the view of the DOJ career
prosecutors who were tasked with investigating both of Trump’s opponents in the
first place, backing up Siebert’s reluctance to bring charges against James and
Comey. It’s worth noting that, unusually, no other prosecutors joined Halligan
in signing either indictment. Multiple
attorneys have now
left the Eastern District of Virginia office, either by resigning or being
pushed out because of their opposition to Halligan’s prosecutions.
“I took an oath to our Constitution … It is this oath
that requires you to follow the facts and the law wherever they lead, free from
fear or favor, and unhindered by political interference. In recent
months, the political leadership of the Department have violated these
principles, jeopardizing our national security and making American citizens
less safe,” wrote one of those career prosecutors, Michael Ben’Ary, in
a letter he taped outside the door to his former office.
All of this turmoil within her own department would be
embarrassing enough to Bondi, who, despite her hyperpartisan loyalty to Trump,
has spent a long career as a prosecutor and, later, the attorney general of
Florida.
But it is the president’s own blatant and public
manipulation of his attorney general that ups the indignity. His September
20 post on Truth Social, for instance, reads like a direct message to
Bondi, urging her to move forward with the prosecutions of these political
enemies, no matter the objections from the actual lawyers. The post, addressed
to “Pam,” says in part: “We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation
and credibility. They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER
NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”
The
Wall Street Journal later reported that Trump had apparently
intended to send that message to Bondi privately. But whether Trump really
meant to simply slide his demands into her DMs or to put her on blast for the
whole world to see, the conclusion is the same: Bondi, and by extension everyone
working under her at the Justice Department, is a puppet for a president who
prizes loyalty and retribution over a careful and faithful application of the
law.
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