Bondi's 'dramatic U-turn' proves DOJ now fully owned by Trump: analyst

Bondi's 'dramatic U-turn' proves DOJ now fully owned by Trump: analyst
FILE PHOTO: U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks to the media, in the Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington D.C., June 27, 2025. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/File Photo

MS NOW producer Steve Benen argues Attorney General Pam Bondi’s reason for re-opening a case she personally closed could not be more obvious, or embarrassing.

“Maybe the attorney general wasn’t comfortable saying ‘I do whatever Trump tells me to do, regardless of merit’ during an on-camera press conference,” Benen said.

In July, Bondi’s very own Justice Department released a joint statement with the FBI declaring that after “an exhaustive review” of “investigative holdings relating to Jeffrey Epstein,” investigators had concluded the case closed. Based on all of the available information, Benen said the two departments agreed there was nothing to justify further inquiries into any of Epstein’s alleged connections or co-conspirators.

But last week, Benen said Bondi made “a dramatic U-turn,” reopening the case and tapping a federal prosecutor to continue the investigation that she had declared dead four months ago.

When asked by a reporter why she was rekindling the cold investigation Bondi replied, “Information. There’s information that’s new information, additional information.”

“As for what ‘information’ she was referring to, neither Bondi nor Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche would say,” Benen said.

“It’s certainly possible that the Justice Department’s and the FBI’s ‘exhaustive review’ missed important detail, which emerged four months later, but there’s a more logical explanation,” Benen said, and he cited President Donald Trump personally directing the Justice Department and the FBI to launch a new investigation into the case of the convicted sex offender and target it at Democrats.

“I will be asking A.G. Pam Bondi, and the Department of Justice, together with our great patriots at the FBI, to investigate Jeffrey Epstein’s involvement and relationship with Bill Clinton, Larry Summers, Reid Hoffman, J.P. Morgan, Chase, and many other people and institutions, to determine what was going on with them, and him,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

“Four hours later, Bondi did as she was told, discarding her own declarations from the summer,” said Benen.

“Thank you, Mr. President,” Bondi wrote in a post on X that included a screenshot of Trump’s request.

“The new line is that the series of events is merely coincidental. Sure, the president who has effectively taken control of the Justice Department barked a foolish order. And sure, his loyalist AG acted four hours later. But what really happened, according to Bondi, is that officials just happened to learn of new ‘information’ she wasn’t at liberty to share at the same time as Trump published a silly tweet telling the DOJ what to do,” Benen said.

Read the full MS NOW report at this link.

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's (D-NY) former chief of staff appears to have claimed a Maryland home as his "primary residence" while living nearly 3,000 miles away in San Francisco, according to a new report.

The San Francisco Standard reported on Friday that Saikat Chakrabarti, a progressive tech millionaire running to replace outgoing Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), claimed a $1.6 million house in Gaithersburg, Maryland, as his primary residence on a mortgage deed.

Chakrabarti told The Standard that he purchased the home for his parents. He added that he has visited them, sometimes for months at a time, since he bought the home. However, he told The Standard that he's never lived at the home full-time.

“I can say it was an honest mistake,” Chakrabarti told the outlet. “And if there is any money I owe, I will of course pay it back.”

The report raises questions about Chakrabarti's path to replacing Pelosi, 85, who said earlier this year that she won't seek reelection in 2026.

Other foes of President Donald Trump with similar mortgage and property records are being prosecuted for alleged mortgage fraud. For instance, New York Attorney General Letitia James and Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) are facing federal inquiries into their mortgages.

Read the entire report by clicking here.

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A columnist for The Guardian argued on Friday that President Donald Trump's attempt at "cuteness" when he called a reporter a "piggy" has backfired spectacularly.

Earlier this week, Trump was asked about the Jeffrey Epstein files while on Air Force One. In response, he pointed his finger at the reporter and said tersely, "Quiet, piggy!" The moment sparked outrage from analysts across the political aisle.

Emma Brockes, a columnist for The Guardian, discussed Trump's comments in a new column for the outlet.

"As with everything the man does, the effect was disastrous and totally inappropriate," Brockes wrote. "But rewatching the video, I saw from the president less an example of his usual bigotry and more an attempt at what looked like 'OK, kiddo' cuteness that, catastrophically, and before I could nip it in the bud, had triggered a tiny sprig of sympathy."

Brockes added that the moment captured Trump's "explosive rage" and revealed something "unnerving" about the president.

"Trump’s explosive rage was well under way before she’d even finished speaking, and the same thing struck one about his language as it always does: that the babyish register of calling someone a 'terrible person and a terrible reporter' is more unnerving – more sinister in a booky wook Clockwork Orange kind of a way – than someone who speaks like a functioning adult," she wrote.

Read the entire column by clicking here.

A pair of legal experts slammed President Donald Trump for attempting to prosecute people who protest against his administration during a new podcast episode that aired on Friday.

The Trump administration is currently pursuing charges against a slate of protesters, including Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA), New York Attorney General Letitia James, Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, and former FBI Director James Comey. The president has also threatened Democratic lawmakers who made a video telling U.S. military members that they don't have to follow illegal orders.

Benjamin Wittes, editor-in-chief at Lawfare, and Mona Charen, policy editor at The Bulwark, discussed these charges on a new episode of "The Mona Charen Show."

"That is a very deep abuse of power," Wittes said about Trump's attempt to prosecute James for mortgage fraud.

"It is so much ratcheting up the stakes here that not only is it immoral and evil for the government to bring a false criminal case against someone, but to do it against people for the simple act of criticizing the president, to do it just because you are a dissenter or you are a you are what he calls an enemy," Charen said. "That goes to the very heart of our most basic liberties."

"That was the case that Comey's lawyers were pressing on the federal judge, that if you look at the timeline of when Trump started making noises about prosecuting Comey, it was always in response to a speech that Trump didn't like," she added. "It was when Comey spoke out and criticized the president."

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