Vance Boelter (www.cnn.com).
Steve Timmer
by Steve Timmer
Jul 2, 2025, 9:30 AM

Don’t be so quick to trust the feds

Here’s a letter I wrote that appeared today, July 2nd, in the Minnesota Star Tribune’s opinion section:

In an opinion piece in the Star Tribune on June 28 (“Now isn’t the time for a turf war with the feds,” Strib Voices), Rochelle Olson decried the decision of Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty to seek to go first in the prosecution of Vance Boelter for the assassination of former House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, and the attempted assassination of state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette.

The lion’s share of the investigation of the case was and will be done by the state’s law enforcement resources, and the first charges against Boelter were lodged by Moriarty for acts committed in Hennepin County. But Olson says that Moriarty should defer to the U.S. Attorney’s office and let it go first out of a misplaced sense of bonhomie.

Olson’s animus toward Moriarty is also apparent, to this writer, anyway.

Olson overlooks the obvious elephant in the room: U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi. Bondi sprang onto the national scene when, as Florida’s attorney general, she refused to join several other state attorneys general in a case against Florida’s Trump University (which led to the disbanding of it), while receiving a $25,000 campaign contribution from Donald Trump.

Bondi has demonstrated a willingness to do Trump’s bidding, serving as Trump’s lawyer at the Justice Department, not the country’s. She’s fired multiple prosecutors for not demonstrating sufficient fealty to Trump, most recently axing three prosecutors who tried Jan. 6 insurrection cases. She’s willing to lean on line prosecutors to do Trump’s bidding.

One of the important public purposes of the prosecution of Boelter will be to lay bare the role of MAGA in Boelter’s radicalization. With a federal prosecution team under the thumb of the highly partisan Bondi, we cannot be sure that will happen. In fact, it probably won’t happen. There has already been a pulling away from surveillance and investigation of right-wing terror organizations by the Trump administration’s Justice Department.

Minnesotans ought to be worried about the efforts of the Justice Department to bigfoot Moriarty on this one. We want to know why the victims were targeted, not merely that they were.

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