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Trump in the Ministry of Justice concludes the “weapon weapon” after rejection of law enforcement

President Donald Trump visited the Ministry of Justice on Friday, which comes when he tried to assert control over the country's highest law enforcement agency, which brought two historical law enforcement measures against him, which were thwarted by his 2024 election victory.

He used the backdrop to repeat his familiar allegation that the Ministry of Justice was “armed” to attack it.

“We have to be honest about the lies and abuse in these walls. Unfortunately, in recent years, a corrupt group of hacks and radicals in the ranks of the American government has extinguished this trust and good will over generations,” he said. “They created the huge forces of our secret services and law enforcement authorities to thwart the will of the American people.”

“Our predecessors transformed this Ministry of Justice into the injustice department,” he continued. “But today I am facing you to explain that these days are over and you will never come back. You will never come back. Now, like the Chief Law Enforcement Officer in our country, I will insist on the full and full accountability for the errors and abuse that have occurred.”

The rare visit marks Trump's first time in the walls of Robert F. Kennedy building as President and follows conflicts for almost a decade, which have proven to be the ultimate stress test for the post-watered norms of the Ministry of Justice in order to preserve independence from the White House.

The opening weeks of Trump's presidency was a time with unprecedented upheavals for the Doj, since Trump's political leadership immediately caused or displaced career officers who worked in several administrations in high -ranking criminals and national security roles.

Dozens of prosecutors who worked on investigations that came from the attack of the Capitol on January 6 of January 6 were released, as were DOJ and FBI officials who worked on the former special advisor Jack Smith's investigation by Trump.

The exertion of the department to reject their criminal proceedings against the New York Mayor of Adam, led to a dramatic patient situation by prosecutors and other top officials who described the agreement as a clear “contact -free pro -quo” in order to ensure the cooperation between the Adams with the aggressive enforcement efforts of the administration.

The Press spokesman for the White House, Karoline Leavitt, made Trump's comments on Fox News in the preview and said that it would concentrate on “restoration of law and order”, but added that he could possibly also discuss “termination of the weapon of the judiciary”.

“Donald Trump will go to the Ministry of Justice to attend General Prosecutor Pam Bondi and Kash Patel in order to give the Ministry of Justice, but to the American people, to restore a speech about Donald Trump, a Ministry of Justice that really focuses on combating crimes and restoration of law and order in American communities,” said Leavitt.

She also presented the comments when she was asked by reporters in the White House on Friday morning and said that Trump was accompanied by families, who have lost the children “by illegal migrant criminals” and because of “illegal Chinese fentanyl”.

In the remarks on Thursday to reporters in the White House, Trump said his speech at Doj would “” put “his” vision “for the department through the rest of his term.

“I think we have incredible people, and all I will do is to interpret my vision. It will really be your vision, but it is my ideas,” he said. “We want to have justice and we want – we want to have security both in our cities and in our municipalities. And we will talk about immigration. We will talk about many things.”

Almost every top representative of the department represented Trump as a defense lawyer either in an official or personal property, which Trump's expectation of loyalty was reflected from a department from which he believes that he disabled his first term and later “weapons” after leaving the office.

While Attorney General Pam Bondi told the senators in their hearing of the confirmation that she would “not politicize” her office, her opening weeks, argument, argued with politically charged statements, which repeatedly emphasized her loyalty to Trump.

“I've never seen it before, and we all love Donald Trump and we want to protect him and fight for his agenda,” said Bondi in an interview with Trump's daughter -in -law Lara Trump.

In a further interview at the beginning of this month, Bondi said that she is still working to “eradicate” civil servants from the department that she said “despise Donald Trump”.

In one of her first guidelines after her confirmation, Bondi Doj officers ordered the interests of the presidency to “eagerly defend” and threatened to sign discipline or termination for every lawyer who refused to sign legal arguments that were brought up by the political leadership.

“As a lawyer of the Ministry of Justice, for example, refusing to promote good luck by refusing to appear in court or sign letters, undermines the constitutional regulations and deprives the President the advantage of his lawyers,” says the guideline.

Trump's visit to Doj has been his first in every government agency since taking office, although this is not without precedent. The last visit to a seated American president of the building came from the former President Barack Obama, who took part in a departure ceremony for Eric Holder in 2015 – for a retirement for an award of his time as General Prosecutor.

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