Pam Bondi BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Friday morning in Washington saw another headline-grabbing turn for Attorney General Pam Bondi as she fired at least 20 prosecutors and support staff who had played roles in the Jack Smith Trump investigations, according to ABC News and other confirmed sources. The firings swept up both direct prosecutors for Smith’s January 6 and classified documents cases and a number of support staff, US Marshals, and litigation assistants identified through the Department’s controversial “Weaponization Working Group.” This move follows earlier layoffs in June, continuing Bondi’s pattern of aggressively purging officials linked to prosecutions of Donald Trump. The chilling effect inside the Justice Department has drawn concern, as senior personnel warn that even ancillary roles are now under scrutiny, a culture reminiscent of the early Trump administration purges. Bondi’s memo justifying the firings explicitly cited President Trump’s remarks about “the unprecedented, third-world weaponization of prosecutorial power.”
But that wasn’t the only controversy shadowing Bondi this week. Axios and ABC News both report that Bondi found herself at the center of a dramatic White House clash with FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino over the ongoing fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein files. According to multiple sources with direct knowledge, Bongino clashed with Bondi over her handling of the high-profile Epstein records, which, when released, proved underwhelming to those expecting bombshells. The administration was forced to admit the long-teased “client list” never existed and released a surveillance video showing what they claimed was proof Epstein had not been murdered—though conspiracy theories exploded after observers noted a so-called “missing minute” in the footage. MAGA influencer Laura Loomer joined the growing chorus of hard-right critics questioning Bondi’s transparency, but White House insiders insist President Trump remains a staunch supporter, saying, “Trump loves Pam and thinks she’s great.”
The implications of the DOJ and FBI’s joint memo this week—stating once and for all there is no evidence of a celebrity client list and upholding the conclusion of suicide in Epstein’s death—are likely to have a long tail in Bondi’s public file. Bondi’s prior, widely-quoted promise that the list was “sitting on my desk right now to review” has fueled both outrage and ridicule as the promised information fizzled, with critics labeling the heavily-redacted February document dump a transparent political stunt.
And it’s not all scandal and infighting—Bondi also made a public appearance earlier this week in support of the USDA’s National Farm Security Action Plan, standing shoulder to shoulder with fellow cabinet members to tout new measures against foreign threats to the American food supply.
All told, Bondi’s been the main character in Washington’s summer drama: orchestrating personnel purges, sparring over the Epstein saga,
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