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Trump's Justice Department DNI Investigates 'Unfair Use of Criminal Justice Against Conservatives, Weaponization of Third World Prosecutors'

김종찬안보 2025. 1. 21. 12:46
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Trump's Justice Department DNI Investigates 'Unfair Use of Criminal Justice Against Conservatives, Weaponization of Third World Prosecutors'

When President Trump took office, he declared 'the end of the weaponization of the federal government' and in order to end it, he instructed the General Department to indiscriminately investigate and report on political bias in government agencies, intelligence agencies, and financial institutions through his executive order, and the 'executive order battle' of the Republican-Democratic bipartisan system began to expand to third countries.

The <End the Weaponization of the Federal Government> executive order on the first day of the Trump administration was not limited to 'investigation and punishment' within the US, but also specified 'investigation into the weaponization of prosecutorial power against allies', ordering the US Department of Justice to investigate 'unfair use of the criminal justice system against conservatives' in Korea.

The <End the Weaponization of the Federal Government> executive order stated that "the Biden administration and its allies across the country have engaged in unprecedented weaponization of third world prosecutorial power to overturn democratic procedures," and it seems that the impeachment of the Yoon Seok-yeol regime in Korea is its target.

<End Weaponization of the Federal Government> is not limited to the United States, and it seems to target the US-Japan-ROK alliance that the Biden administration created as a foreign policy strategy, and it separately states that "the Biden administration and its allies across the country have engaged in unprecedented weaponization of Third World prosecutorial power to overturn democratic procedures."

The official title of <End Weaponization of the Federal Government> is that President Trump's first executive order "has been unfairly using the criminal justice system against conservatives," and President Trump has consistently argued for four years that he and his supporters are conservatives and that they should be punished for "unfairly using the criminal justice system."

President Trump's first executive order, which he has consistently condemned during his election campaign for the "weaponization of the Justice Department" by the Democratic Party Biden administration, instructed the Attorney General on the 20th to thoroughly investigate federal law enforcement agencies, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Federal Trade Commission to find signs of political bias in work performed under the Biden administration.

Trump's first day's executive order was to have the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) investigate political bias and report to the White House, and recommend "improvement measures," while excluding the "time frame (limit)" for the executive order.

When President Clinton of the Democratic Party was elected in 2012, the first step in reforming the 12-year Reagan Republican hard-line conservative system was to investigate and strike down unconstitutional provisions in "executive orders, executive orders, and police regulations."

President Clinton was acquitted of the death of Rodney King, a black man who was beaten to death by a white police officer, due to the strengthening of public power by the Republican hard-line conservatives' "war on drugs," based on "police regulations," and the LA riots immediately followed, and immediately after the Republican conservative system turned to the Democratic Party, a "conviction was handed down based on the law, not police regulations."

Regarding the "executive order" on the first day of the Trump administration, the New York Times said, "It's the same kind of ethics that the Justice Department's inspector general often carries out." It is unclear what type of review, such as an investigation or criminal investigation by prosecutors, will be conducted,” and it is also unclear what the “accountability goal” officially announced by President Trump, which is to “hold the previous administration accountable for weaponizing the federal government against the American people,” means.

The New York Times continued, “The wording of the document suggests that the Trump administration’s review will investigate the actions of district attorneys and state officials, such as the district attorneys of Manhattan and Fulton County, Georgia, and the New York attorney general, who filed lawsuits against President Trump,” and “The presidential order criticized the Justice Department for “ruthlessly prosecuting” more than 1,500 people on charges related to the riots in the hallways of the Capitol on January 6, 2021,” it reported on the 20th.

In his inaugural address, President Trump said that the U.S. government “is failing to protect our wonderful, law-abiding citizens and is providing sanctuary and protection to dangerous criminals from prisons and mental institutions around the world who have illegally entered our country.”

The AP called this a “lie” and denied the facts, stating, “Other There is no evidence that countries are sending criminals or the mentally ill across their borders,” and “Trump frequently made this claim during his most recent campaign,” the AP reported on the 20th.

In an article about the first presidential debate on June 28th last year, AP reported that “Trump: “They say relatively few people went to the Capitol, and in many cases, they were escorted by the police,” and that this was a “lie.”

In fact-checking this, AP stated, “That’s false. The attack on the U.S. Capitol was the deadliest attack on the center of American power in the past 200 years. As thoroughly documented by video, photographs, and people who were there, thousands of people swarmed the Capitol, resulting in a brutal scene of hand-to-hand combat with police.”

The rioters storming the Western District Court on January 19th mimicked the “violent storming of the U.S. Capitol” by the Trump administration four years ago.

President Trump granted pardons to 1,500 people on his first day in office.

 

Edwin Feulner, Chairman of the Heritage Foundation Asia Center, said of his advice, “President-elect Yoon talked about overcoming the situation of a two-year minority government, so I believe the US president can issue an executive order without the consent of Congress. I believe he can do it that way.” 

He added, “First, he advised that he should form a staff of people with similar opinions, find people who share the same views, and select such people. Strategy means knowing exactly where you are going, focusing on your goal, and getting to where you want to go. Strategic ambiguity is a contradiction and doesn’t work properly. You need to decide where you need to go and select the right person for that,” he said. 

The Heritage Foundation presented a strategy for reorganizing the administration to restore hard-line conservatism in the ‘Project 2025’ report during Trump’s re-election campaign, and the chairman was nominated as the chief of staff but was eliminated.

In 1980, the Heritage Foundation led the neutralization of public policy from the hard-line conservative. Reaganomics strategy to the conservative strategy, and continued to be involved in the strategy of supporting the Chun Doo-hwan regime and the hard-line conservative party in Korea.

Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation, said on July 3 last year that “most political violence over the past 25 years has been initiated by the left,” and that the Republican Party’s “ambitious policy plan” upon Trump’s victory in the presidential election was to “remove right-wing opposition officials from the federal government” through “Project 2025,” which was announced as an executive order by the Trump administration.
Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation, continued in a statement on July 17 that Americans are “in the process of carrying out a second American revolution to reclaim power from elites and authoritarian bureaucrats,” and that “these patriots are committed to a peaceful revolution at the ballot box, but unfortunately, the left has a long history of violence, so it is up to them to allow a peaceful transfer of power.” Chairman Roberts then mentioned the LA protests that followed the police killing of George Floyd in 2020, saying, “Some of them erupted into crime, vandalism, and violence,” and criticized the January 6, 2021 Capitol riots, which were violent sit-ins that forced supporters to lose the presidential election, as “Democrats accusing Republican lawmakers of violence,” and matched this with the riots by lawmakers who supported Yoon Seok-yeol to overturn the verdict by storming the courthouse and criticizing “excessive police suppression.”
The incident of the storming of the Capitol, where Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office was robbed and destroyed and a photo was taken with her legs up on the desk, is an imitation of the way Koreans visit and destroy the office of a judge who issued a court warrant.

During the inaugural ball, President Trump made a video call with US troops stationed in South Korea at Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek and asked, "How is Kim Jong Un doing? Can I ask how South Korea is doing right now?" He then said, "You're dealing with somebody who has very bad intentions. Although I've developed a very good relationship with him, he's a cookie." He chose North Korea as his first military exercise.
<Heritage Foundation, ‘Left-Wing-Leading Political Violence,’ Republican Revolution, ‘Pull Out Right-Wing Opposition Civil Servants, July 19, 2024>

<Heritage Foundation, President-elect Yoon’s Hard-line Conservative Strategy ‘Strengthening Executive Orders’, May 4, 2022> <Han Dong-hoon, ‘National Damage from Separation of Investigation and Prosecution’, Prejudice Against Excessive Investigation, May 8, 2022>