No charges against Trump's immigration czar because he apparently didn't steal enough
Jon
Queally for Common Dreams
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Tom Homan: "Show me the money" |
Citing multiple people “familiar with the probe,” a review
of internal documents, MSNBC was the first to report that during “an undercover operation last year,
the FBI recorded Tom Homan [...] accepting $50,000 in cash after indicating he
could help the agents—who were posing as business executives—win government
contracts in a second Trump administration.”
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$50,000 is chump change compared to Trump family grifting |
The case implicates both FBI Director Kash Patel and
Attorney Pam Bondi, who heads the Justice Department. Both were appointed by
Trump and are deeply loyal to him politically.
MSNBC reports:
It’s unclear what reasons FBI and Justice Department
officials gave for shutting down the investigation. But a Trump Justice
Department appointee called the case a “deep state” probe in early 2025 and no
further investigative steps were taken, the sources say.
On Sept. 20, 2024, with hidden cameras recording the scene at a meeting spot in
Texas, Homan accepted $50,000 in bills, according to an internal summary of the
case and sources.
The federal investigation was launched in western Texas in the summer of 2024
after a subject in a separate investigation claimed Homan was soliciting
payments in exchange for awarding contracts should Trump win the presidential
election, according to an internal Justice Department summary of the probe
reviewed by MSNBC and people familiar with the case.
The U.S. Attorney’s office
in the Western District of Texas, working with the FBI, asked the Justice
Department’s Public Integrity Section to join its ongoing probe “into the
Border Czar and former Acting Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Tom Homan and others based on evidence of payment from FBI undercover agents in
exchange for facilitating future contracts related to border enforcement.”
The revelations prompted Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.)
to declare that Trump’s second term is the “most corrupt
administration we have ever seen.”
Matt Duss, executive vice-president at the Center for
International Policy, asked: “Seriously though, has anyone ever been handed
$50,000 cash in a paper bag for something legit?”
While that’s not a legal standard, news of the dropped case
against Homan, given his central role in Trump’s ramped-up attacks on migrants
and communities nationwide, sparked an array of outrage, many questions, and a
demand for more answers from the Justice Department.
“Who’s the illegal now, Tom Homan?” asked Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.).
“Tom Homan should be fired immediately and charged,” said Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-N.J.). “Kash Patel should be suspended pending impeachment proceedings, and anyone who aided in this cover-up should be held accountable. Homan’s relationship with GEO Group, who own Delaney Hall in Newark, should be thoroughly investigated, and the facility closed pending that investigation. The amount of corruption in this administration is endless.”
Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.)
had a similar reaction. “Corruption that’s stunning even for this
administration,” Markey said. “Homan and anyone who knew and covered this up
must resign.”
As the Times reporting notes, the “episode
raises questions about whether the administration has sought to shield one of
its own officials from legal consequences, and whether Mr. Homan’s actions were
considered by the White House when he was appointed to his government role.”
In response to questions from MSNBC and
the Times, Trump officials downplayed the seriousness of the case.
They said that after it was investigated, the bribery allegations did not stand
up.
White House Deputy Press Secretary Abigail Jackson
told MSNBC the probe that led to the recording of Homan was a
“blatantly political investigation.” However, it’s clear from the reporting
that the original investigation was not targeting Homan at all.
In a joint statement issued Saturday, Patel and Todd
Blanche, the deputy attorney general, said the investigation “was subjected to
a full review by F.B.I. agents and Justice Department prosecutors. They found
no credible evidence of any criminal wrongdoing.”
That hardly satisfied Democrats in Congress, who said it’s
clear the public has a right to know every detail about what occurred and why
the case was dropped.
“Release the tapes—Americans deserve disclosure of evidence
showing top DHS official Homan accepting a bag full of $50,000 in cash,” said
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). “We need to know why the investigation was
dropped—all the facts and evidence.”