The Justice Dept, headed by acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, has become one of the worst grifters in the United States. Chump is a convicted felon and Blanche was one of his attorneys. Now the two work to destroy the law. Jason Linkins (The New Republic) writes:
Donald Trump last year amassed one big beautiful rap sheet of scandal and criminality, with multiple instances of corruption that made Teapot Dome look quaint. But the president’s bogus new “settlement” with his own administration’s IRS, which he had sued in January for $10 billion over the leak of his tax returns in 2020, hits scorching new heights of depravity. The deal’s contours were bad enough when it looked like Trump was simply going to take a small fortune of taxpayer money and line his own pockets. But that was last week: The new plan is for $1.776 billion in taxpayer money to be set aside as a slush fund, which Trump will effectively control, to pay out to January 6 insurrectionists and political cronies that he believes were wronged back when the Department of Justice wasn’t his mobbed-up plaything. Some of the worst people in America are already lining up for payouts.
There are plenty of ways to describe this arrangement. Call it cartoon villainy. Call it criminal. For certain, call this an utterly impeachable offense. Also call this very worrisome: There is a non-zero chance that Trump will simply get away with it, now that corrupt elites dominate American life with absolute impunity. For those with any vested interest in restoring democracy and clearing out the Augean stables of Trumpism, how we respond to this is very important.
Grifters creating a slush fund to grift some more -- and the deal also means no more auditing ever of Chump by the IRS. That's also illegal. In addition, Alexander Willis (Raw Story) reports:
The Trump administration went on the defensive Friday night after getting exposed for scrubbing online Justice Department (DOJ) records of those convicted of violent crimes related to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, including one Texas man who was later convicted of online solicitation of a minor.
In June of 2024, the Biden administration’s DOJ published a press release about Andrew Taake, a 35-year-old man from Texas who that month was sentenced to more than 6 months in prison after violently attacking police officers during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot armed with “bear spray and a metal whip.” At the time, Taake had another criminal case pending for child solicitation, a detail mentioned in the DOJ’s press release.
Maryl Kornfield, a staff writer with The Washington Post, noticed on Friday that the DOJ’s press release on Taake was removed, and called out the Trump administration in a social media post on X for “quietly deleting info about the Capitol attack from the DOJ website,” a move that coincides with the Trump administration preparing to dole out nearly $1.8 billion to those who believed they were unfairly targeted by the Biden administration’s DOJ, including Capitol rioters.
The Trump administration’s DOJ defended its actions, responding to Kornfield’s social media post with a message that left onlookers stunned.
“Nothing ‘quiet’ about it,” reads a social media post from the DOJ’s official “Rapid Response” account on X.
“We are proud to reverse the DOJ’s weaponization under the Biden administration. We will do everything in our power to make whole those who were persecuted for political purposes. This includes stripping DOJ’s website of partisan propaganda.”
The DOJ’s admission left several critics shocked.
“Open admission here from the DOJ that they’re doing PR for people who weren’t just convicted of assaulting police officers but some of whom turned out to be pedophiles and Nazis,” wrote former MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan Friday night in a social media post on X. “That’s who they’re defending.”
They're lying for their crew, for the insurrectionists. This is C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"
The slush fund. It came up this week in a Senate Appropritions Subcommittee hearing that Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche appeared at (see Wednesday's snapshot). We'll note this exchange:
For much of President Trump’s time in office, Republican lawmakers have had little appetite to stand up to his brand of vindictive politics.
Through revenge primary campaigns, bullying social media posts and the threat that he can command the G.O.P. base to go after anyone at any time, Mr. Trump has brought lawmakers in his party under his control like no president in modern history. A single critical word against Mr. Trump or his agenda could result in a full-scale retribution campaign to force a disloyal Republican from office.
But this week, in a rarity in G.O.P. politics, Mr. Trump’s taunts, bullying and threats have backfired, at least for now. Senate Republicans, after the president targeted two of their own, stood up to Mr. Trump on two of his biggest priorities: money for his White House ballroom, and a $1.8 billion fund to reward Trump supporters who claim political persecution by Democrats, such as the rioters who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
“So the nation’s top law enforcement official is asking for a slush fund to pay people who assault cops?” said Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky. “Utterly stupid, morally wrong — take your pick.”
When Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, arrived at the Capitol on Thursday to meet with Republicans questioning the Justice Department fund that President Trump has said he wants to use to pay people who claim to have been unfairly targeted by the government, he may have expected a few strident complaints.
Instead, what unfolded in an ornate room just off the Senate floor on Thursday morning was a two-hour blowup in which dozens of Republican senators vented their anger and concern about the president’s fund at Mr. Blanche.
They questioned its legal basis, whom it would pay and how the process would work. And they made it clear they wanted no part of the plan, the product of a deal struck between Mr. Trump’s lawyers and his own administration to use money that Congress does not control to pay off purported victims of government mistreatment, potentially including some of the rioters who violently assaulted their workplace during the Jan. 6, 2021, riot.
By the end, Republicans were so livid that party leaders scrapped planned votes on the party’s top priority — a $72 billion immigration crackdown measure it had planned to muscle through before Memorial Day — punting action for fear of having to cast votes on the fund.
During his opening statement at a nominations hearing, Durbin also denounced the Trump loyalists appearing in Committee today including two circuit nominees, nominee to be Inspector General in DOJ
WASHINGTON – During today’s Senate Judiciary Committee nominations hearing, U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, criticized the Trump Administration’s misuse of taxpayer dollars to line the pockets of January 6 insurrectionists and Trump’s political allies through a nearly $2 billion Department of Justice slush fund.
Today’s nominations hearing includes Benjamin Flowers, to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit; Matthew Schwartz, to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; and, Don Berthiaume, Jr., to be Inspector General in the Department of Justice. During his opening statement, Durbin also denounced the lifetime nominations of Mr. Schwartz and Mr. Flowers. Mr. Schwartz continues to represent the President in two pending cases. That includes the appeal of a New York State jury verdict finding President Trump guilty of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records, stemming from a $130,000 hush-money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels. Mr. Flowers filed a Supreme Court amicus brief supporting the President’s unconstitutional attempt to limit birthright citizenship.
Key Quotes:
“Imagine if Joe Biden went this far [with a DOJ slush fund]. Would we have a hearing in the Judiciary Committee? I certainly know we would and you do too. Will there be a hearing in this Committee when it comes to this new slush fund which [stated] ‘forever bar[red] and preclude[d] from prosecuting or pursuing… claims against President Trump, related individuals—including, without limitation, family and filing jointly.’ It’s a get-out-of-jail free card forever.”
“Just last week, the President posted another rant on social media, lambasting judges who had the audacity to follow the law instead of catering to his whims. After claiming his Supreme Court appointees have ‘shown so little respect’ because they ruled against him, President Trump said federal judges should ‘be loyal to the person that appointed them.’ In fact, judges take an oath that they will administer justice ‘without respect to persons’ and ‘will faithfully and impartially discharge and perform all the duties…under the Constitution and laws of the United States.’ Nowhere in the oath does it say that judges are beholden to the president who nominates them.”
“Nonetheless, President Trump continues to nominate his personal attorneys to serve as judges. Matthew Schwartz, who we will hear from this morning, is the third personal attorney of President Trump who he has nominated to a circuit court seat, following the nominations of Emil Bove and Justin Smith.”
“For aspiring judges not lucky enough to become one of the President’s personal attorneys, they can jockey for President Trump’s support in another way: supporting his baseless legal arguments. Benjamin Flowers, who is also before us today, fits that bill. In one amicus brief, he challenged Pennsylvania’s administration of the 2020 election. Why? Because President Trump lost the popular vote in Pennsylvania and was trying to overturn the results.”
“President Trump is disappointed in the Supreme Court Justices he appointed during his first term. While they are reliable and conservative, they occasionally rule against him. For Donald Trump, this is an unforgivable act of disloyalty. So, in his second term, he demands that his appointees bend a knee, kiss the ring, and demonstrate their blind loyalty to him. President Trump is now putting forward nominees who have shown that they are willing to ignore the rule of law so long as they follow his agenda.”
“That is in direct conflict with what is required of federal judges. We should have confidence that jurists will be neutral arbiters who rule without fear or favor. But I am deeply concerned that President Trump tapped today’s nominees because he believes that they will ‘be loyal to the person that appointed them.’”
Video of Durbin’s opening statement is available here.
Audio of Durbin’s opening statement is available here.
Footage of Durbin’s opening statement is available here for TV Stations.
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BlackCommentator.com May 21, 2026 Issue 1088 |
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