
US Attorney General Pam Bondi Moves to Military Housing After Threats
The relocation comes amid reported threats from drug cartels and criticism tied to her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.

US Attorney General Pam Bondi, according to those in the know, has apparently taken up residence on a military base near Washington, D.C., after receiving a wave of threats. This move happened just within the last month or so. From what’s being reported, these threats stem from both drug cartels and vocal opponents unhappy with how she’s managed aspects of the Jeffrey Epstein case.. Sources referenced by major news outlets say there was a noticeable uptick in menacing messages earlier this year, right after the high-profile operation targeting Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s abduction. Now, Maduro himself is up against multiple U.S.
charges (drug trafficking among them), though he flat-out denies any wrongdoing.. Bondi isn’t alone here,not by a long shot. Several other top members of President Donald Trump’s team have also opted for life inside secure military installations over the past year. Case in point: Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, and former Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem all reportedly made similar moves. The first whispers about senior officials gravitating toward military housing surfaced back in October; at that time, it was already being called an emerging trend among administration insiders looking for safer accommodations.
But here’s something no one seems able to nail down: Do these civilian leaders actually foot the bill for their quarters. So far, only Kristi Noem has gone on record about her arrangement, her spokesperson claimed she paid “fair-market rent” for her place on base. Noem herself had previously run point on some tough immigration crackdowns, but got ousted from her role just last week after mounting criticism over various department blunders,including two deadly police shootings during January protests in Minneapolis and an especially pricey government ad campaign. While civilian use of military housing isn't entirely unheard of, it pops up now and then,the scale we’re seeing under this administration is arguably unprecedented; reports suggest it marks a significant departure from tradition since such homes were historically reserved mainly for high-ranking officers in uniform.
Written by Sandy van Dongen
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