Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

The GOP vs. law enforcemen­t

- Steven Greenhut Columnist

Shortly before the 2016 election, Mike Pence tweeted that “@realDonald­Trump and I commend the FBI for reopening an investigat­ion into (Hillary) Clinton's personal server because no one is above the law.” And who can forget the GOP crowds chanting “lock her up” in regard to Clinton — a sentiment Trump supported?

I had no problem with the email investigat­ion provided a judge had authorized it and it conformed to legal standards. Truly, no one — not even a potential or actual president — should be above the law. However, the “lock her up” mantra, which pro-Trump crowds directed at other Democrats including Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, gave me the creeps.

In banana republics, the new despot tries to lock up the old strongman and rounds up his vanquished supporters. Even accounting for emotions that politician­s drum up at rallies, that line was appalling. Americans should never cheer the idea of turning federal law enforcemen­t — whatever its many current flaws and abuses — into a version of the Praetorian Guard.

Last week's big news is the FBI had executed a search warrant at Trump's Mar-aLago estate, as it conducts an investigat­ion into the alleged mishandlin­g of classified documents. The former president and his minions have been all over the media describing the investigat­ion as a political witch-hunt — a concept that, apparently, they no longer find to be entertaini­ng.

“My beautiful home, MarA-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents,” the former president said in a statement. Some of his most-agitated supporters are openly calling for civil war. They are blasting the FBI's “tyranny.” Suddenly, people who seemed eager to sic federal agents on their political opponents are aghast that the FBI would conduct an investigat­ion of one of their own.

Some conservati­ve rhetoric would be laughable if it weren't so dangerous. One popular podcaster, Steven Crowder, warned liberals: “(Y)ou think they're not gonna come for you?” He didn't seem concerned about

turning the U.S. into a Third-World hellhole: “I don't care if we become Nicaragua at this point. You've already rung the bell, you can't un-ring it.”

But the strangest response, from U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, RGeorgia, was to “defund the FBI.” The Never Trump website, The Bulwark, collected assorted tweets and statements from prominent Republican members of Congress and commentato­rs who had savaged leftists for their “defund the police” rhetoric during anti-police-abuse protests — but who now are echoing Greene's ideas.

“Man Shot in Downtown Memphis Just Off Beale Street. This is What Happens When You Elect `Defund the Police' Democrats,” tweeted conservati­ve columnist Todd Starnes in June. This week he had a somewhat different hot take: “The FBI has been weaponized. Defund and Dismantle.”

Fox News' Dan Bognino called for widespread firings and accountabi­lity at the bureau: “I don't buy this rank and file crap either. Throw it right in the garbage. I don't buy it one bit. I was a Secret Service agent, and I was the rank-and-file. Me. And you know what? I saw something I didn't like, and I left.” At this point, I should start cheering. Conservati­ves finally are echoing points that my fellow criminal-justice reformers have long made.

Police agencies absolutely need reform. Police unions protect bad actors. District attorneys rarely prosecute those officers even for egregious conduct. Fired cops simply get jobs at other agencies. The “thin blue line” mentality prods officers follow orders rather than hold misbehavin­g colleagues accountabl­e — as evidenced by the failure of Derek Chauvin's three colleagues to intervene during George Floyd's death.

Instead of walking away when their agencies carry out unconstitu­tional raids or abuse the power of asset forfeiture to confiscate property, police typically go along without complaint. But instead of proposing serious reforms, some progressiv­es trotted out their “defund the police” mantra, which allowed conservati­ves to easily depict them as advocates for lawlessnes­s.

It was one of the dumbest political mantras I've ever heard, but it was based very loosely on a sound idea. Why shouldn't Americans use the public purse strings to force police department­s to improve their operations? When government agencies abuse our constituti­onal rights, they will do so even more zealously if we give them more money. Ditto for federal police agencies.

Now, suddenly, the right seems to believe progressiv­es were right — it only took the FBI to target their beloved ex-president to open their eyes. It remains to be seen whether the raid on Trump's estate is an abuse of power, but the FBI has a history of misusing authority. (So does the IRS, which is poised to receive a huge cash infusion.)

Frankly, it's hard to believe conservati­ves who wanted to lock up their political opponents and opposed police-accountabi­lity measures are acting out of principle rather than partisansh­ip. Their opponents on the left are no better, but perhaps this could be a teachable moment for everyone.

 ?? TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Gail Marianes, left and others Trump supports outside the Riverside FBI office to protest the FBI raid on Mar-A-Lago in Riverside on Wednesday.
TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Gail Marianes, left and others Trump supports outside the Riverside FBI office to protest the FBI raid on Mar-A-Lago in Riverside on Wednesday.
 ?? DREW ANGERER — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland delivers a statement at the Department of Justice on Thursday, in Washington, D.C. Garland addressed the FBI's recent search of former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence, announcing that the Justice Department has filed a motion to unseal the search warrant as well as a property receipt for what was taken.
DREW ANGERER — GETTY IMAGES/TNS U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland delivers a statement at the Department of Justice on Thursday, in Washington, D.C. Garland addressed the FBI's recent search of former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence, announcing that the Justice Department has filed a motion to unseal the search warrant as well as a property receipt for what was taken.
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 ?? TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? More than 50Trump supports outside the Riverside FBI office protest the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago in Riverside on Wednesday.
TERRY PIERSON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER More than 50Trump supports outside the Riverside FBI office protest the FBI raid on Mar-a-Lago in Riverside on Wednesday.

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