Eric Swalwell EXPLODES On Pam Bondi AFTER DOJ REFUSES To Prosecute Death Threats Against His Family!
The Selective Justice of a Weaponized DOJ: When Death Threats Become “Politically Permissible”
The American legal system is currently undergoing a grotesque transformation, shifting from a blind arbiter of justice to a curated tool for political survival. During a recent hearing, Congressman Eric Swalwell laid bare a reality that should send chills down the spine of any citizen who believes in the rule of law. The mask didn’t just slip; it was torn off, revealing a Department of Justice (DOJ) that appears to have moved into the business of selective protection—where the safety of an elected official and his family depends entirely on their loyalty to the man in the Oval Office.
The exchange between Swalwell and Attorney General Pam Bondi was a masterclass in the theater of the absurd. It began with the predictable, yet no less infuriating, dance around the Epstein files. When asked how many times Donald Trump’s name appears in those documents, the response was a calculated fog. Is it a thousand? Five hundred? A hundred? The official line was a shrug of feigned ignorance. This isn’t just a lack of transparency; it is active damage control. When the DOJ claims numbers are “misleading” rather than providing them, they are protecting a narrative, not the truth. If the numbers were truly insignificant, they would be shouted from the rooftops. Their silence is a confession of the political fallout they are desperately trying to contain.

But the most damning portion of the testimony wasn’t about the skeletons in the Epstein closet—it was about the living, breathing threats being ignored in the present. Swalwell detailed a harrowing timeline of violent intimidation that the DOJ, under its current political leadership, has seen fit to ignore. In June 2025, an individual left eleven voicemails promising to hunt Swalwell down and toss him over the Golden Gate Bridge. The DOJ declined to prosecute. In May 2025, a direct death threat on social media was met with the same shrug from the Southern District of Texas.
The hypocrisy here is breathtaking. We are constantly lectured by the current administration about the “weaponization” of government, yet here we see the most literal form of it: the withdrawal of protection as a form of retaliation. When the DOJ cites a harasser’s “health conditions” or status as a “prolific caller” as reasons to ignore threats to shoot children in the head, they aren’t practicing compassion; they are signaling to the mob that certain targets are fair game.
This is the “Green Light” era of American politics. By refusing to prosecute clear, violent threats against political opponents, the DOJ effectively issues a permission slip to the most radical elements of the base. It creates a tiered system of citizenship. If you are an ally, the law is a shield; if you are an “enemy,” the law is a vacuum, leaving you and your family exposed to the whims of anyone with a phone and a grievance.
Swalwell pointed out the historical context of this malice, noting how he and Adam Schiff had their records seized in 2017 and 2018 in what the Inspector General later deemed an “absurd” and “improper” investigation. This is a long-running theme of using the state’s investigative powers to harass critics while simultaneously dismantling the mechanisms that should protect those same critics from physical harm.
The Attorney General’s response—offering to talk “off-camera” and assuring that some cases are “very active”—is the classic bureaucratic brush-off. It is an attempt to de-escalate a public exposure of institutional rot by retreating into the shadows of “private briefings.” If the threats were being taken seriously, the families of these officials wouldn’t be living in a state of self-imposed house arrest while the perpetrators walk free.
We are witnessing the death of institutional neutrality. When the agency responsible for enforcing the law begins to weigh the political affiliation of a victim before deciding whether to prosecute a crime, it ceases to be a Department of Justice. It becomes a Department of Loyalty. The “Government Gangsters” narrative isn’t just a catchy book title; it is a description of a system where the “arena” Swalwell mentions has been rigged.
The most judgmental takeaway from this hearing is the realization that the DOJ is no longer interested in the “safety of all Americans.” They are interested in the safety of the regime. The hypocrisy of decrying “weaponization” while actively refusing to protect the lives of congressional children is a moral failure that no amount of political spin can fix. This isn’t law enforcement; it’s a protection racket where the only way to be safe is to stop asking questions.