CREATORS
October 14, 2025
The first
U.S. Attorney General was Edmund Jennings Randolph. He was a cousin of former
President Thomas Jefferson and was appointed attorney general by President
George Washington.
Including
Randolph, the United States has had 87 attorneys general. The 87th and current
attorney general, Pam Bondi, has taken the Department of Justice to depths that
Randolph, Jefferson and Washington would have never thought possible.
Bondi was
born and raised in Florida, graduating from Stetson University Law School.
After serving most of her career as an assistant district attorney, she was the
first woman elected Florida attorney general.
Since
leaving the AG's office, Bondi assumed the role of a President Donald Trump
loyalist. She was his personal attorney during his first impeachment and
rallied for Trump during his third campaign for president.
Although
she was Trump's second choice for attorney general — former congressman Matt
Gaetz's nomination crashed and burned — Bondi has zealously demonstrated her
commitment to Trump.
The last
few weeks have demonstrated that the Department of Justice is not independent
of the president, but rather a tool of the partisan machinations of a president
hell-bent on revenge against his political opponents.
Bondi was
summoned to appear at a Senate Judiciary Committee Oversight Hearing on Oct. 7,
2025, and came with guns a blazing. Most of the hearing, she refused to answer
questions asked by Democratic committee members. When she did respond, it was
probably the most outrageous conduct by a sitting attorney general in American
history.
According
to The New York Times, California Sen. Adam B. Schiff ticked off a list of more
than a dozen questions Ms. Bondi had declined to answer. Schiff asked about
Immigration Czar Tom Homan's acceptance of $50,000.00 in a bag given to him by
undercover FBI agents during a sting operation. More pointedly, Schiff asked
why the FBI and/or DOJ dropped the investigation.
"Will
you support a request by this committee to provide that Homan tape or tapes to
the committee? Yes or no?" Schiff asked, according to the Times.
"You
can talk to Patel about that," she said, referring to the F.B.I. director.
"I'm
talking to you," he replied. "Will you support that request?"
Her
response, "Will you apologize to Donald Trump?" She then called U.S.
Sen. Adam B. Schiff "a failed lawyer" and added that she would have
fired him if he had worked for her.
Bondi's
attack on Senate Democrats on the Judiciary Committee was sandwiched between
two even more grievous attacks on the rule of law.
Former FBI
Director James Comey was indicted on September 25 on charges of making a false
statement and obstruction related to his testimony before the Senate Judiciary
Committee in 2020. The indictment came only days after President Trump demanded
that Bondi act "now" to bring charges against his political foes.
To
appreciate the gravity of the Comey indictment, first consider that the prior
U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, Erik Siebert, had expressed
doubts internally about bringing charges against Comey, as well as New York
Attorney General Letitia James. Siebert was essentially fired.
Trump then
immediately installed Lindsey Halligan, a White House aide with no prior
prosecutorial experience, as U.S. attorney. Halligan pulled the trigger on
Comey's indictment. She then turned her sights on James. Attorney General James
had a target on her back since she led a successful civil fraud action against
Trump in 2023.
Last week,
she was indicted by Halligan's office on federal charges. Prosecutors accuse
James of alleged bank fraud and making false statements to a financial
institution regarding a mortgage loan for a house in Norfolk, Va., according to
the BBC.
These are
dark days for the Department of Justice. The Department's mission statement
includes the following: "(T)o ensure fair and impartial administration of
justice for all Americans."
As Ruth
Marcus recently wrote in The New Yorker, Trump and Bondi's conduct is not
impartial justice: "The essence of impartial justice is treating like
conduct alike — not identifying the target and then finding the crime."
Matthew T.
Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book
The Executioner's Toll, 2010 was released by McFarland Publishing. You can
reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino
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