Attorney General Merrick Garland published an op-ed in the Washington Post on Tuesday, declaring that unfounded attacks on the Justice Department “must end.” It’s strange and unsettling for the chief law enforcement officer of the United States to write such a thing. Whatever the merits of his argument, it doesn’t come off as an argument. It comes off as a threat.
Garland opens with the case of a man recently convicted for threatening to bomb an FBI field office. That’s a crime, of course, and it has no place in American society. However, Garland goes on to say that in recent weeks, the Justice Department has seen “an escalation of attacks that go far beyond public scrutiny, criticism, and legitimate and necessary oversight of our work. They are baseless, personal, and dangerous.”
You would think he’s referring to attacks like the bomb threat. But he’s not. In the very next sentence, he says these attacks “come in the form of threats to defund particular department investigations, most recently the special counsel’s prosecution of the former president.” So for Garland, a bomb threat is apparently the same as threats by lawmakers to defund the obviously corrupt investigation of former President Donald Trump by DOJ special counsel Jack Smith.
Garland then says that some of these “attacks” come in the form of “conspiracy theories crafted and spread for the purpose of undermining public trust in the judicial process itself.” But there’s no law in America against spreading “conspiracy theories”—just ask the entire corporate media that spent years spreading outlandish conspiracy theories about how Trump was a Russian agent. Many Americans now sincerely believe (with good reason) that in light of the ongoing lawfare against Trump, the judicial process itself is indeed compromised and undeserving of public trust. If these Americans are spreading what Garland thinks are “conspiracy theories” to persuade their countrymen that the Justice Department is untrustworthy, that is their right as Americans.
Garland doesn’t appear to think so. Throughout his op-ed, he elides the stark difference between specific threats of violence (like a bomb threat) and First Amendment-protected speech (like disagreeing with Merrick Garland). We should expect nothing less from the attorney general who smeared concerned parents who speak out at school board meetings as “domestic terrorists.” Garland is effectively saying that “unfounded” criticism of a weaponized and politicized Justice Department is the equivalent of a bomb threat.
Garland further argues that the DOJ is being attacked with “false claims that a case brought by a local district attorney and resolved by a jury verdict in a state trial was somehow controlled by the Justice Department.” He’s referring to the case Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg brought against Trump in New York, which resulted in a conviction on murky, convoluted charges likely to be overturned on appeal. When Garland decries accusations that the case was “somehow controlled by the Justice Department,” he ignores the fact that one of his own attorneys, Matthew Colangelo, left the DOJ and three days later joined Bragg’s office to work on the Trump case—a clear indication of DOJ involvement.
Garland makes absurd statements such as that the Justice Department “makes decisions about criminal investigations based only on the facts and the law. We do not investigate people because of their last name, their political affiliation, the size of their bank account, where they come from, or what they look like.” Yet, we all know that’s not true. Consider the classified documents case against Trump. Both Biden and Obama improperly removed classified documents from the White House, and neither was prosecuted by their successor’s Justice Department. Garland’s refusal to investigate people based on their last name is evident in special counsel David Weiss allowing the statute of limitations to expire on Hunter Biden’s alleged financial crimes.
The most dangerous aspect of Garland’s op-ed is how he lumps things together. He claims that “using conspiracy theories, falsehoods, violence, and threats of violence to affect political outcomes is not normal.” Using conspiracy theories and falsehoods to affect political outcomes is absolutely normal in American politics—especially among Democrats and their allies in the corporate press. They’ve turned it into an art form. But of course, Garland isn’t talking about those conspiracy theories and falsehoods. He’s only talking about the ones from Trump supporters, which to him are the real danger. The real danger here is an attorney general who thinks he’s above criticism and feels comfortable issuing public threats that we’d better cut it out—or else.