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Photograph of the exterior view of California State Reform School in Whittier, ca.1910. The Victorian-style building stands a about four-stories tall. Four dormers are facing front from the faASSade. Two other dormers, facing each
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Trump Ousts AG Pam Bondi, Installs Todd Blanche as Acting AG as He Signals Desire to Move Past DOJ Epstein Files Controversy

President Trump has fired Attorney General Pam Bondi and named Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche as acting attorney general. The move followed mounting White House frustration over Bondi’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and her failure to deliver prosecutions Trump wanted—criticisms that prompted bipartisan scrutiny and a House Oversight subpoena that lawmakers say still requires her testimony—while Blanche, a former Trump defense lawyer, has said the DOJ should “move on” from the Epstein controversy.

Donald Trump U.S. Department of Justice and Rule of Law Presidential Administration Personnel Department of Justice and Law Enforcement Justice Department and Rule of Law

📌 Key Facts

  • President Donald Trump announced on April 2, 2026 that he is removing Attorney General Pam Bondi and named Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche as acting attorney general; reports conflict on exact timing—some outlets describe an immediate ouster while Axios says Bondi will leave DOJ in 45 days.
  • Bondi’s removal is tied in multiple reports to sustained White House and conservative frustration over her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and her inability to deliver successful prosecutions of Trump’s political targets despite political loyalty.
  • Bondi’s tenure was marked by overt loyalty to Trump (including a prominent Trump banner at DOJ), aggressive personnel changes and purges of career prosecutors and FBI officials, mass departures across the department, and several high‑profile politically charged prosecutions that were later dismissed or rejected by courts and grand juries.
  • Todd Blanche, 51, is a former SDNY prosecutor and white‑collar defense partner who resigned to represent Trump in major criminal cases; as deputy attorney general he ran DOJ’s day‑to‑day operations, oversaw the release of Epstein materials, has been a visible public defender of DOJ actions, and said publicly the department should “move on” from the Epstein files controversy.
  • The released Epstein materials total millions of pages (reported as more than 3 million), but DOJ officials and former prosecutors say high evidentiary standards have made new U.S. prosecutions difficult; DOJ has stated it has not found credible evidence in the files to support additional charges beyond those already brought.
  • House Oversight has subpoenaed Bondi to testify about the Epstein files and has scheduled a deposition for April 14; lawmakers from both parties say they will still press to enforce the subpoena despite her removal, and Oversight leaders signaled continued investigations into the matter.
  • Political reaction was sharply bipartisan: Democrats and some Republicans criticized Bondi as partisan or culpable in a cover‑up, GOP members who pushed the subpoena celebrated her ouster, and senators warned that any permanent nominee will face scrutiny and potential confirmation hurdles (e.g., Sen. Thom Tillis’s condition regarding Jan. 6 positions).
  • Trump is reported to be considering several candidates as Bondi’s permanent successor—Lee Zeldin is widely viewed as a favorite, with Blanche, Harmeet Dhillon, Jay Clayton and Sen. Mike Lee also discussed—and her removal follows rapid recent Cabinet turnover (e.g., DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s earlier ouster).

📊 Relevant Data

Among the 716 individuals prosecuted for the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot as of July 2023, 92% (659) were White, 5.4% (39) were Hispanic, 1.4% (10) were Black, 0.7% (5) were Asian, and 0.1% (1) was Native American. This compares to the U.S. population demographics in 2022, where non-Hispanic Whites made up 58.9%, Hispanics 19.1%, Blacks 13.6%, and Asians 6.3%.

A Demographic and Legal Profile of January 6 Prosecutions — Seton Hall University School of Law

In a 2023 survey of U.S. adult citizens, 82% of White respondents had a driver's license with their current name and/or address, compared to 72% of Black, 73% of Hispanic, and 79% of Asian/Pacific Islander respondents. Additionally, 5% of White adult citizens had no driver's license at all, compared to 18% of Black, 15% of Hispanic, and 13% of Asian/Pacific Islander adult citizens.

Who Lacks ID in America Today? An Exploration of Voter ID Access and Barriers — University of Maryland Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement

Non-citizen voting in U.S. elections is extremely rare, with comprehensive audits and studies from 2020 onward finding instances in the range of 0.0001% to 0.0003% of total votes cast, and no evidence of widespread occurrence.

Noncitizen Voting is Vanishingly Rare — Brennan Center for Justice

📊 Analysis & Commentary (3)

Pam Bondi Gets Beached as Attorney General
The Wall Street Journal by The Editorial Board April 02, 2026

"A Wall Street Journal editorial frames Pam Bondi’s ouster as further evidence that the Trump White House expects the Attorney General to be a partisan instrument—seeking an official who will both implement policy and pursue political prosecutions—arguing that expectation makes the job untenable and undermines DOJ norms."

KARL ROVE: Trump dropped Bondi, but the real political fight is just beginning
Fox News April 03, 2026

"Karl Rove argues that Trump’s dismissal of Pam Bondi was predictable and tactical, but it does not end the Epstein‑files and DOJ‑weaponization controversies — it merely moves them onto new players (acting AG Todd Blanche or a potential nominee like Lee Zeldin) and into a larger, continuing political fight that will shape confirmation battles and the midterms."

JONATHAN TURLEY: Why Trump fired Bondi and chose this moment for a Justice Department reset
Fox News April 03, 2026

"Jonathan Turley argues that Trump’s ouster of Pam Bondi and elevation of Todd Blanche is a calculated, timely Justice Department reset—part of a pattern of managerial firings—meant to shore up prosecutorial defenses and political positioning ahead of likely Democratic investigations after the midterms."

📰 Source Timeline (19)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 03, 2026
5:10 PM
Eric Swalwell denies Bondi leak, cautions Democrats from celebrating her ouster
MS NOW by Allison Detzel
New information:
  • Rep. Eric Swalwell publicly denies claims that Pam Bondi or anyone in her orbit tipped him off about an FBI investigation into his past ties to alleged Chinese intelligence operative Christina Fang.
  • Swalwell alleges that FBI agents, not Bondi, alerted The Washington Post because they were concerned about efforts by Kash Patel and President Trump to interfere in California’s governor’s race.
  • He warns Democrats not to celebrate Bondi’s removal, arguing Trump wants an attorney general willing to 'break the law and weaponize the Department of Justice' against political enemies.
  • Swalwell issues a direct warning to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche that Democrats expect to win Congress in the fall and will use subpoena power to expose any abuses of power.
5:09 PM
Blanche says DOJ should move on from the Epstein files
MS NOW by Sydney Carruth
New information:
  • Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told Fox News’ Jesse Watters that "the Epstein files" should not be part of DOJ’s work going forward and that it is "time for the DOJ to move on" from the controversy over their release.
  • Blanche incorrectly claimed in the interview that DOJ "has now released all the files with respect to the Epstein saga," despite his own prior statement in January that millions of pages were reviewed but withheld on asserted privilege grounds not allowed by the disclosure law.
  • The article reiterates that the law required redactions only to protect victim identities and did not allow shielding powerful individuals, yet the DOJ’s release exposed many survivors’ names and even nude images while leaving powerful men’s identities largely hidden.
  • It notes that Pam Bondi was formally subpoenaed by House Oversight Chair James Comer to testify about DOJ’s handling of the Epstein files and that her obligation to appear for an April 14 deposition remains unresolved after her firing.
  • Rep. Nancy Mace, a GOP Oversight member who pushed for Bondi’s subpoena, publicly celebrated Bondi’s ouster on X, underscoring intraparty tensions over the Epstein release.
  • The piece emphasizes that Blanche was present at the House Oversight hearing on the files and is now invoking that as evidence of transparency, though lawmakers in both parties remain unconvinced.
2:47 PM
Trump eyes next attorney general as key GOP senator signals potential roadblock
Fox News
New information:
  • Sen. Thom Tillis, R‑N.C., says his 'threshold' for supporting any Bondi successor on the Senate Judiciary Committee is that the nominee not excuse any aspect of Jan. 6, and he will oppose anyone who does.
  • The piece reports Trump is considering EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin and mentions that some senators are pushing for Sen. Mike Lee, R‑Utah, though Lee has publicly stated on X, 'I’m not going anywhere.'
  • It notes Sen. Eric Schmitt, R‑Mo., has previously been under consideration for attorney general but publicly turned the job down after winning his Senate seat, saying he was 'just getting started' there.
1:05 PM
What to know about Todd Blanche, Trump's pick for acting attorney general
PBS News by Michael R. Sisak, Associated Press
New information:
  • Detailed biographical background on Todd Blanche: age 51; grew up in Denver suburbs; undergraduate degree from American University; night student at Brooklyn Law School while working as a paralegal in the SDNY U.S. attorney’s office, graduating cum laude.
  • Career specifics inside DOJ: Blanche clerked for federal judges Denny Chin and Joseph Bianco (now both on the 2nd Circuit), then served eight years as an SDNY federal prosecutor, including two years as co‑chief of the violent crimes unit overseeing about two dozen prosecutors and cases involving killings, kidnappings and other violent offenses.
  • Private‑practice history: joined WilmerHale’s Manhattan office in 2014, then became a partner in Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft’s White Collar Defense and Investigations practice in 2017.
  • Prior high‑profile defense work: Blanche represented Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and succeeded in 2019 in getting the Manhattan DA’s mortgage‑fraud case against Manafort dismissed on double‑jeopardy grounds.
  • Specific account of his shift to Trump’s orbit: Blanche resigned from Cadwalader in 2023 to represent Trump, calling it “an opportunity I should not pass up” in an internal email, and then led Trump’s criminal defense team in the New York hush‑money case (which ended in Trump’s conviction on 34 felony counts) and in two Jack Smith federal cases that have since been abandoned.
  • Clarification of his public profile inside DOJ before becoming acting AG: as deputy attorney general under Pam Bondi, Blanche ran day‑to‑day DOJ operations, was one of the department’s most visible public defenders, and personally oversaw release of government files on Jeffrey Epstein while frequently appearing on TV news programs.
  • New quote: Trump’s social‑media description of Blanche as “a very talented and respected Legal Mind.”
12:15 PM
Trump ousts Pam Bondi as attorney general, names Todd Blanche as acting AG
https://www.facebook.com/CBSMornings/
New information:
  • CBS segment confirms on air that President Trump has fired Pam Bondi as U.S. attorney general and that Todd Blanche will serve as acting attorney general until Trump decides on a permanent nominee.
  • It notes this is the second time in less than a month that Trump has ousted a Cabinet member, underscoring the pace of turnover.
  • The piece frames Blanche simply as acting attorney general, without adding detail on his prior role or the Epstein/prosecutions context carried in other coverage.
11:25 AM
Pam Bondi is out at DOJ. And, NASA's Artemis II has left Earth's orbit
NPR by Brittney Melton
New information:
  • NPR reports the White House believed Bondi mishandled law-enforcement files related to Jeffrey Epstein, specifically after she publicly claimed to have an Epstein 'client list' on her desk that DOJ later said did not exist.
  • Carrie Johnson reports that Trump wanted Bondi to be more aggressive in prosecuting people he dislikes, but judges and grand juries did not back those cases, suggesting a lack of evidence.
  • NPR notes that during Bondi’s tenure there was a 'massive exodus' at DOJ, with hundreds of prosecutors and FBI agents leaving, reshaping the institution’s workforce.
9:02 AM
After the release of the Epstein files, why have there been so few arrests?
NPR by Ava Berger
New information:
  • DOJ spokesperson Katie Kenlein tells NPR that 'there have not been additional prosecutions beyond Epstein and Maxwell because there has not been credible evidence that their activities extended to Epstein's network,' signaling DOJ’s official position that the released files do not support further U.S. charges.
  • NPR reports the total size of the released Epstein files as more than 3 million pages, including victim accusations and thousands of emails and photos showing Epstein’s ties to prominent figures who maintained contact after his 2008 plea.
  • The piece notes that, despite the files and ongoing bipartisan pressure, there have been no new U.S. arrests tied to the disclosures, in contrast to the U.K., where former Prince Andrew and former ambassador Peter Mandelson were arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office related to Epstein-linked corruption (though neither has been charged).
  • Four former prosecutors and one former law‑enforcement officer interviewed by NPR emphasize how high the 'beyond a reasonable doubt' standard and evidentiary requirements make new prosecutions difficult even in a scandal this large.
April 02, 2026
8:07 PM
Bondi ouster ignites bipartisan uproar: 'Partisan, petulant, political hack'
Fox News
New information:
  • Top Democrats including Chuck Schumer, Elizabeth Warren, Adam Schiff and Hakeem Jeffries posted sharply worded reactions on X calling Bondi corrupt, partisan and responsible for DOJ ‘weaponization.’
  • Schumer, Warren and Schiff explicitly tie Bondi’s tenure and firing to what they describe as a ‘cover-up’ or blocking of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
  • Rep. Yassamin Ansari states that Bondi remains under subpoena from the House Oversight Committee and ‘must still comply’ and testify about the ‘criminally botched’ Epstein files release.
  • Rep. Jasmine Crockett uses the firing to attack Trump’s broader cabinet choices and portrays the president as quick to discard ‘incompetent women’ while protecting male allies.
  • House Minority Leader Jeffries publicly labels Bondi a ‘partisan, petulant, political hack’ and predicts Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth could be ‘next.’
7:13 PM
Trump pushes out Pam Bondi, as political problems mount at home
The Christian Science Monitor by Story Hinckley
New information:
  • Confirms Bondi was effectively fired (“pushed out”) and that she met with Trump on April 1, 2026, after attending Supreme Court arguments on his birthright‑citizenship case, where he told her her firing was imminent and she tried to persuade him to keep her.
  • Reports that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will assume the attorney general role on an interim basis, as stated by Trump.
  • Adds that this is the second high‑level female Cabinet official Trump has pushed out in recent weeks, following DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s firing in early March, highlighting a pattern of rapid Cabinet churn.
  • Provides on‑the‑record context that Trump had been angry for months over Bondi’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, including her February 2025 "client list" stunt with binders that contained no new information and subsequent forced release of millions of documents that produced embarrassing revelations for Trump.
  • Includes expert commentary (former Trump State Department appointee Matthew Bartlett) that extreme personal loyalty to Trump still has not protected senior law‑enforcement officials from eventual dismissal, echoing the fates of Jeff Sessions and Bill Barr.
  • Connects Bondi’s ouster to Trump’s broader political vulnerability: deep divisions in his base over the Iran war, rising gas prices, a Supreme Court rebuke of his tariff policy, and his solicitor general facing tough questioning over the birthright‑citizenship executive order.
6:16 PM
Attorney General Pam Bondi pushed out
Axios by Alex Isenstadt
New information:
  • Axios reports Bondi will leave DOJ in 45 days, rather than an immediate removal.
  • Trump announced the change on Truth Social, framing Bondi as ‘transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector’ and naming Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche as acting attorney general.
  • Axios details that Lee Zeldin is widely viewed as Trump’s favored permanent replacement, with Blanche, Harmeet Dhillon and Jay Clayton also under consideration.
  • The story adds that Bondi accompanied Trump to the Supreme Court the day before her ouster, as reports of her possible removal circulated and Trump publicly defended her.
  • Axios further documents internal and external pressure over Bondi’s handling of the Epstein files, including bipartisan criticism, a botched release after congressional pressure, a House Oversight subpoena and impeachment talk, and Chief of Staff Susie Wiles saying Bondi ‘whiffed’ on the task.
6:15 PM
Lawmakers vow to force Pam Bondi to testify about the Epstein files despite her ouster
Axios by Andrew Solender
New information:
  • House Oversight Committee members from both parties say they will still seek to enforce their subpoena compelling Pam Bondi’s testimony despite her removal as attorney general.
  • Rep. Nancy Mace, the Republican who forced the subpoena vote, told Axios her subpoena was issued to Bondi by name and therefore "still stands" and that Bondi "handled the Epstein Files in a terrible manner and seriously undermined President Trump."
  • Oversight ranking Democrat Robert Garcia said Bondi "will not escape accountability and remains legally obligated" to appear, and tied her to broader Oversight investigations into Bondi and former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.
  • Rep. Ro Khanna accused Bondi of participating in a "cover-up" and said she must answer questions about remaining documents and the lack of new prosecutions.
  • A spokesperson for Oversight Chair James Comer, who opposed the subpoena, said he will consult Republicans and DOJ on the status of the deposition subpoena now that Bondi has been removed.
  • Bondi is currently scheduled for a deposition on April 14 under the existing subpoena.
5:59 PM
5 moments that defined Pam Bondi's AG tenure
Axios by Herb Scribner
New information:
  • Axios lays out a detailed chronology of Bondi’s role in the Epstein files saga, including that she hyped a supposed 'client list' she claimed was on her desk, which DOJ later said 'never existed.'
  • The article notes that three former FBI agents filed a new lawsuit earlier this week against Bondi, Kash Patel, DOJ and FBI over firings tied to the Arctic Frost investigation into Trump’s 2020 election efforts, following a similar suit last fall.
  • Bondi’s February 11, 2026 House Judiciary hearing is described with specific incendiary quotes at Rep. Jamie Raskin ('washed‑up, loser lawyer') and Rep. Thomas Massie ('This guy has Trump derangement syndrome, you’re a failed politician').
  • Axios details how Bondi fronted Trump’s 'retribution campaign' against James Comey, New York AG Letitia James and Sen. Adam Schiff, including a federal judge’s order calling all actions flowing from prosecutor Lindsey Halligan’s 'defective appointment' unlawful.
  • The piece highlights Bondi’s widely mocked comment in that February hearing that 'The Dow is over 50,000 right now,' which fueled online ridicule and memes.
5:35 PM
Attorney General Pam Bondi out at DOJ
NPR by Ryan Lucas
New information:
  • NPR provides Trump’s exact social-media statement praising Bondi, claiming she drove a 'massive crackdown in Crime' and that murders fell to 'their lowest level since 1900'—a highly dubious claim presented without supporting data.
  • Confirms Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump’s former personal attorney, will serve as acting attorney general, directly tying DOJ leadership to Trump’s personal legal orbit.
  • Details specific politically charged prosecutions initiated under Bondi at Trump’s urging, including cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, which were later tossed after a judge found the acting U.S. attorney who secured the indictments was unlawfully appointed.
  • Expands on the breadth of investigations Bondi’s DOJ opened into perceived Trump opponents such as Fed Chair Jerome Powell, Sen. Adam Schiff, and former intelligence chiefs James Clapper and John Brennan.
  • Describes deep structural damage inside DOJ under Bondi: firing prosecutors and FBI officials tied to Capitol riot and Trump investigations, gutting the Public Integrity (public-corruption) section, and mass departures from the Civil Rights Division amid claims it was being turned into a White House enforcement arm.
  • Adds fresh detail that Bondi’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein–related files—including publicly claiming she had an Epstein 'client list' on her desk, followed by DOJ/FBI statements that no such list existed and no further files would be released—triggered a political firestorm that played a large role in her downfall.
5:33 PM
Trump Ousts Attorney General Pam Bondi
The Wall Street Journal by C. Ryan Barber
New information:
  • Wall Street Journal piece tightens the characterization of Bondi’s tenure as marked by failed efforts to prosecute Trump’s preferred targets and a view inside the White House that she mismanaged the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
  • It quotes Trump’s social‑media statement calling Bondi a “Great American Patriot and a loyal friend” who “faithfully served as my Attorney General over the past year” and saying she will move to a “much needed and important new job in the private sector,” though no job details are provided.
  • The article frames the ouster as driven by Trump’s dissatisfaction that, despite her loyalty and attempts to deliver on his priorities, she ultimately failed to appease him.
5:25 PM
Trump fires Bondi as attorney general
PBS News by Michelle L. Price, Associated Press
New information:
  • The article explicitly ties Bondi’s firing to months of scrutiny and intra‑right backlash over the Justice Department’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein‑related sex‑trafficking files, which had made her a target among conservatives despite her loyalty to Trump.
  • It details that Bondi ‘upended’ DOJ’s traditional culture of independence, oversaw large‑scale firings of career staff deemed insufficiently loyal to Trump, and that hundreds of other employees resigned during her tenure.
  • The piece notes Bondi placed a banner with Trump’s face on DOJ headquarters and publicly cast herself as Trump’s chief supporter and protector, a sharp break from her predecessors’ practice of keeping distance from the White House.
  • It reports that Bondi struggled to deliver on Trump’s demands to prosecute political rivals, with multiple investigations rejected by judges or grand juries, contributing to the president’s dissatisfaction.
  • Bondi’s defenders are quoted as saying she refocused DOJ on illegal immigration and violent crime and sought to undo what they describe as Biden‑era ‘overreach’ in prosecuting Trump, underscoring the competing narratives around her tenure.
5:22 PM
The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe: Pam Bondi is out
MS NOW by Joe Scarborough
New information:
  • Confirms that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will serve as acting attorney general following Pam Bondi’s firing.
  • Pins the timing more precisely: Bondi was fired the night before the April 3, 2026 newsletter, narrowing the window of the dismissal.
  • Frames the firing explicitly as 'breaking news' tied to frustration over Bondi’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein files, reinforcing that as a central stated reason in media coverage, though still largely through pundit framing rather than formal White House documentation.
5:19 PM
Trump Fires Pam Bondi as Attorney General
Nytimes by Tyler Pager and Glenn Thrush
New information:
  • President Donald Trump has formally fired Attorney General Pam Bondi, ending her tenure as head of the Justice Department.
  • The dismissal converts earlier internal deliberations about replacing Bondi—previously reported as under consideration—into an executed personnel decision.
  • The firing immediately opens a vacancy atop DOJ, with implications for ongoing investigations and the administration’s pressure campaign for more prosecutions of perceived political opponents.
5:15 PM
Trump fires Pam Bondi as attorney general
MS NOW by Jake Traylor
New information:
  • MS NOW reports the firing was publicly announced Thursday, April 2, 2026, with a timestamp of 1:15 PM EDT and quotes Trump’s Truth Social post calling Bondi a "Great American Patriot" and saying she will move to a new private‑sector job.
  • The article confirms that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will serve as acting attorney general, echoing Trump’s public statement.
  • A White House official tells MS NOW that Trump had informed Bondi in recent days she would be removed to "help her along," and that many in his closest orbit had been advocating for her ouster for months.
  • MS NOW reports Lee Zeldin, current EPA administrator, is on the shortlist to replace Bondi, citing three sources familiar with the matter.
  • The piece reiterates prior Wall Street Journal reporting that Trump was increasingly unhappy with Bondi’s failure to "successfully prosecute his political foes" and her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files release, and notes that indictments of James Comey and Letitia James obtained under Bondi were later dismissed by judges.
  • The story places Bondi’s removal in cabinet‑level context by noting that Kristi Noem’s ouster as DHS secretary in March was the first, and that Bondi is now the second Trump cabinet member removed this term.