Pam Bondi might be gone from her role as U.S. attorney general, but House Democrats vow she will not soon be forgotten. In fact, an article at HuffPost indicates Dems tend to make sure Bondi's life becomes quite unpleasant. Under the headline "Pam Bondi must still answer for Epstein files cover-up, House Dems say," Ryan Grenoble writes:
Pam Bondi may no longer be the U.S. attorney general, but she’s still on the hook for everything that happened while she was, Democrats say.
After news of Bondi’s firing trickled out Thursday, Democratic lawmakers on the House Oversight Committee re-upped their commitment to deposing Bondi and forcing her to answer questions about the Justice Department files on sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as well as about his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, under oath.
“Attorney General Pam Bondi has been leading a White House cover-up of the Epstein files. She has weaponized the Department of Justice to protect Donald Trump and put survivors in harm’s way by exposing their identities,” said ranking member Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.). “She will not escape accountability and remains legally obligated to appear before our committee under oath.”
Garcia said that “serious” investigations into the conduct of former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem will also continue.
“If they think we are moving on because they were fired,” said Garcia, “they are gravely mistaken.”
Other Democrats joined Garcia in taking a "we mean business approach," Grenoble reports:
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who, along with Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), helped force the release of the Justice Department’s files concerning Epstein, also said he expects Bondi to comply.
Khanna pointed out that he and Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) had “subpoenaed Bondi to testify before the Oversight Committee on April 14th. Even though she has been fired, she must still answer to Congress about the remaining documents, why there have been no new prosecutions, and why she participated in a cover-up.”
Dems generally seem disinclined to grant any wayward Trumpers "Get Out of Jail Free" cards. Grenoble writes:
Rep. Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.), who also sits on the committee, agreed.
“Pam Bondi may be leaving the Department of Justice, but she must still follow the law and respond to the Oversight Committee’s subpoena to be deposed about covering up Epstein files,” he said in a statement. “I have a lot of questions. The American people deserve answers, and the Epstein survivors deserve justice.”
House Dems, like many members of the public, seem particularly interested in Bondi's actions connected to the Epstein files -- and that is understandable. But any inquiry should not stop there. Consider some of the ugliness surrounding her office that reflects disdain for the rule of law. Here is a USA Today summary of controversies that swirled around Bondi as AG.
Perhaps nothing defines the warped nature of Bondi's tenure like a press release from the House Committee on the Judiciary, headed by Democrats ranking member Jamie Raskin. Dated 2/11/26, the release is titled "15 Questions Pam Bondi Refused to Answer Before Congress":
Here are the questions the Attorney General refused to answer before Congress, amid nationwide calls for truth and transparency:
- Bondi refused to answer how many of Epstein’s co-conspirators her DOJ has indicted (zero).
- Bondi refused to answer whether she would create a joint task force to give state attorneys general and district attorneys around the country access to DOJ’s trove of evidence regarding Epstein and his co-conspirators, so they can go build the cases and bring the indictments DOJ refuses to pursue.
- Bondi refused to answer whether the email from the Epstein files involving Steve Tisch is worthy of further investigation.
- Bondi refused to answer whether it’s important for prosecutors to protect sexual assault victims’ identities.
- Bondi refused to answer why 500 of her attorneys somehow didn’t redact dozens of survivors’ names, identities, and sensitive photographs.
- Bondi refused to answer why she refused to investigate Prince Andrew who is shown in disturbing photos in the Epstein files.
- Bondi refused to answer whether she has knowledge if President Trump was at parties with underage girls.
- Bondi refused to answer whether she has prepared a list of so-called domestic terrorism groups. And she refused to commit to providing the committee with that list.
- Bondi refused to answer when DOJ decided not to investigate Lex Wexner as a co-conspirator and why.
- Bondi refused to answer whether DOJ owes anything to Epstein’s victims, even as Donald Trump sues for $10 billion in personal damages from the federal government.
- Bondi refused to answer how many employees work at the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (which she eliminated).
- Bondi refused to answer whether DOJ has questioned Secretary Lutnick and other Administration officials about their ties to Epstein.
- Bondi refused to answer who at DOJ signed off on Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer.
- Bondi refused to answer whether her Department would consider recommending a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell.
- Bondi refused to answer whether the President has lied when he spread a crazy right-wing conspiracy theory about the murder of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman.
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