JUST IN — HEARING CLASH: Ted Lieu Grills Pam Bondi During Heated Hearing Over Epstein Files
The Bondi Betrayal: A Masterclass in Institutional Rot
The scene at the House Judiciary Committee hearing room this week was nothing short of a funeral for the American rule of law. Watching Attorney General Pamela Bondi sit before those cameras, raise her right hand, and swear an oath to tell the truth was a performance in peak irony. We are witnessing the total transformation of the People’s Department of Justice into a private security firm for the elite. Bondi didn’t just fail to do her job; she actively weaponized her office to shield the powerful while trampling over the survivors of one of the most heinous criminal enterprises in history.
The hypocrisy is breathtaking. Bondi claimed with a straight face that there is “no evidence” Donald Trump committed a crime, calling the inquiry “ridiculous.” This is the nation’s top law enforcement officer looking at a mountain of forensic evidence and calling it a molehill. It is a lie designed to obscure a reality that is mathematically impossible to ignore. When ranking member Jamie Raskin revealed that Trump’s name appears over one million times in the recently released Epstein files, he wasn’t talking about a casual association. He was describing a pervasive presence in the archives of a global sex trafficking ring. Yet, Bondi insists there is nothing to investigate. It is the height of arrogance to suggest that a million references in a criminal file warrant zero scrutiny.

The Shield for Predators and the Weapon Against Victims
The most damning aspect of this entire debacle is the blatant misuse of the Department’s redaction authority. Under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the DOJ was legally mandated to protect the victims and disclose the perpetrators. Instead, Bondi’s department performed a grotesque inversion of that law. They used their pens as shields for men like Sultan Ahmed bin Salam, the CEO with financial ties to Trump’s business who reportedly emailed Epstein about “loving the torture video.” That name was hidden until Congress forced it out.
Meanwhile, the Department showed no such “care” for the survivors. They published the real names, addresses, and even bank information of dozens of women who had kept their trauma private for decades. Most revolting of all, they released nude images of victims where their faces were clearly visible. This isn’t a “low error rate” as Bondi tried to spin it; it is institutionalized cruelty. It is a deliberate exercise of power meant to intimidate survivors into silence. When you redact one name out of 32 on a victim list—exposing 31 of them—that isn’t an accident. It’s a policy of retaliation.
A Department in Collapse
The internal rot is evidenced by the mass exodus of anyone with a shred of integrity. Career prosecutors are quitting in droves. When Danielle Cisson, the acting US Attorney in Manhattan, and her top assistant Hagen Scotton—an Iraq war veteran and clerk for Chief Justice Roberts—resign rather than follow corrupt orders, the message is clear. They are refusing to be the “fools or cowards” required to execute Bondi’s agenda.
Bondi has replaced seasoned professionals with political operatives. She forced out a 15-year career prosecutor for refusing to bring baseless charges against political enemies and replaced him with Lindsay Halligan, Trump’s personal defense lawyer who has exactly zero prosecutorial experience. This is not a functioning justice system; it is a vendetta factory. The DOJ is now an instrument of revenge, pursuing the President’s enemies while providing a clean bill of health to the man who signed the paychecks.
The Procedural Path to Accountability
The judiciary is already pushing back, and for good reason. Federal judges have excoriated the DOJ for what Chief Judge Boasberg suggested was a “fraud on the court.” When the third branch of government finds the government’s statements to be “inexplicably misleading” and “patently incredible,” the system is in a state of emergency. Grand juries are rejecting Bondi’s attempts to indict political targets, and judges are throwing out appointments that are blatantly unlawful.
The only way forward is through the cold, hard application of procedural rules. The House Oversight Committee’s demand for documents regarding these redaction failures is a start, but it cannot end there. Perjury is a felony, and misconduct in office is an impeachable offense. If an Attorney General can lie under oath and ignore a veto-proof mandate from Congress with impunity, then the concept of “no one is above the law” is officially dead.
Bondi’s performance this week was a spectacle of deflection. She chose to recite economic statistics rather than answer for the exposure of children’s photos. She chose fealty to a single man over her duty to the American people. The survivors of Jeffrey Epstein deserved a Department of Justice worthy of its name. Instead, they got Pam Bondi—a wall of silence, a million redactions, and a poison lie that strikes at the heart of our democracy.