WASHINGTON — Attorney General Merrick Garland said Thursday he will not allow the Justice Department ''to be used as a political weapon," as he denounced "conspiracy theories and ''dangerous falsehoods" targeting federal law enforcement.
Speaking to U.S. attorneys gathered in Washington and other Justice Department members, Garland forcefully defended the department's integrity and impartiality against claims of politicization by Republicans. Garland said norms protecting the department from political interference matter ''now more than ever.''
''Our norms are a promise that we will not allow this Department to be used as a political weapon. And our norms are a promise that we will not allow this nation to become a country where law enforcement is treated as an apparatus of politics," Garland said to applause in in the Great Hall at Justice Department headquarters.
Garland's comments come amid an onslaught of attacks from Republicans, who claim the Justice Department has been politically weaponized to go after former President Donald Trump. Trump was indicted in two separate criminal cases by special counsel Jack Smith, whom Garland brought in from outside the department to run the investigations.
In response to Garland's speech, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung called the criminal charges against the former president ''phony," and said Garland has done ''tremendous damage to a once great institution."
Trump has vowed if returned to the White House in November to ''completely overhaul" what he has described as the ''corrupt Department of Injustice.'' He has also threatened to jail those ''involved in unscrupulous behavior'' this election, writing in a recent post on X that they will face ''long term prison sentences so that this Depravity of Justice does not happen again."
Garland did not mention Trump or Republicans or discuss specific cases in his speech. But he condemned what he described as ''outrageous'' attacks he said put law enforcement in harm's way.
''These attacks have come in the form of conspiracy theories, dangerous falsehoods, efforts to bully and intimidate career public servants by repeatedly and publicly singling them out, and threats of actual violence,'' Garland said. ''Through your continued work, you have made clear that the Justice Department will not be intimidated by these attacks."