
President Donald Trump is cranking up the pressure on his handpicked Attorney General Pam Bondi to launch a wave of prosecutions against his longtime political foes, firing off a blistering Truth Social post that lists names and demands swift “justice.”
The escalation comes hot on the heels of Trump’s ouster of a top federal prosecutor who wouldn’t touch a probe into New York Attorney General Letitia James, signaling a no-holds-barred approach to settling old scores from his first term and beyond.
In a post timestamped late last week, Trump laid it out raw: “Pam: I have reviewed over 30 statements and posts saying that, essentially, ’same old story as last time, all talk, no action.
Nothing is being done.
What about Comey, Adam ‘Shifty’ Schiff, Leticia??? [sic] They’re all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done.”
He didn’t stop there, railing against the double standard: “They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”
The targets couldn’t be clearer: James, the Democratic AG who spearheaded the civil fraud case that saddled Trump with a $364 million penalty (later ballooned to $527 million with interest); California Sen. Adam “Shifty” Schiff, the former House Intelligence chair who led the charge on Trump’s first impeachment over Ukraine; and ex-FBI Director James Comey, the man behind the 2016 probe into Russian election meddling that Trump has branded a “hoax” and “witch hunt.”
Trump has called for Comey’s head repeatedly, accusing him of overreach in investigating foreign interference and vowing he’d face trial if Trump returned to power.
Draining The Swamp?
This isn’t idle chatter—it’s a direct prod at Bondi, Trump’s loyalist AG who’s already navigating a DOJ reshuffle under his second-term microscope.
Trump wrapped the post with a broadside at the deep state: “There are a lot of crooked people that were here before me.
You had people that almost destroyed our country.
If I didn’t win this election, our country would be destroyed.
We wouldn’t have a country right now.”
And his marching orders?
Simple and sweeping: “Everybody… focus on everybody.”
The timing ties straight to last week’s drama in Virginia, where Trump forced the resignation of U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert for dragging his feet on charging James with mortgage fraud.
Trump later bragged he’d personally canned Siebert, but sources say the interim prosecutor quit under threat of firing after his team found zilch to back the claims: James had only flagged her Virginia home as primary on a limited power-of-attorney form that lenders never even glanced at.
The White House eyed a quick replacement to ramp up the heat on James, but the episode reeks of payback—James’s 2023 fraud win against the Trump Organization still stings, even after an appeals court tossed the fine while upholding the core findings against Trump and his sons.
Bondi’s Role Moving Forward
Bondi, a former Florida AG and Trump impeachment defender, has stayed mum publicly, but the pressure cooker is on.
Her DOJ has already kicked off separate probes into James for “deprivation of rights” linked to the Trump case, yanked her security clearance in February, and floated similar mortgage fraud whispers against Schiff and even Fed Governor Lisa Cook—though those evaporated under scrutiny.
James fired back indirectly, slamming a separate federal policy freeze on school funding as a low blow: “The federal government cannot use our children’s classrooms to advance its assault on immigrant and working families.”
Her lawyer, Abbe David Lowell, called the whole James probe “the most blatant and desperate example of this administration carrying out the president’s political retribution campaign” just last month.
For Schiff and Comey, it’s a grim redux of 2019-2020 grievances.
Trump has hammered Schiff for “treasonous” impeachment antics and Comey for the Russia “hoax” that dogged his first presidency.
Now, with Bondi at the helm, the question is whether this is bluster or the opening salvo in a DOJ revenge tour that could drag midterms into chaos.
Trump’s inner circle sees it as course correction after years of what they call weaponized justice against him.
But critics from Democrats to civil liberties watchdogs warn it’s a slide toward authoritarian score-settling, eroding the rule of law one enemy at a time.
As Bondi weighs her next move, one thing’s clear: in Trump’s Washington, loyalty means delivering on the boss’s hit list—no matter the fallout.
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