Breaking: Major update on Bondi defying subpoena - Brian Tyler Cohen
BREAKING news - Justice Department announces Pam Bondi wont appear for deposition.
The following summary is AI-generated.
- Pam Bondi was subpoenaed personally, not in her official capacity as Attorney General, meaning her resignation doesnt void the legal obligation to testify before the House Oversight Committee on April 14, 2026.
- Congressional leaders, including Republicans like Nancy Mace, have reaffirmed that Bondi must appear, citing bipartisan support for the subpoena and the need for accountability regarding withheld Epstein files.
- The DOJs claim that Bondi no longer must testify is being rejected by committee members, who argue oversight authority extends beyond office tenure as shown by past subpoenas of former AGs.
- Bondis firing just weeks before her deposition is widely viewed as strategic, aimed at delaying or blocking testimony about sensitive DOJ actions during her tenure.
- Legal experts predict Bondi may invoke executive privilege once shes a private citizen, forcing Congress to litigate to enforce the subpoena a likely next phase in the standoff.
- Chair James Comer faces political pressure to enforce the subpoena consistently, especially after threatening the Clintons with contempt failing to act could expose partisan double standards.