Alex Jones, the outspoken commentator and long-time critic of Washington’s political establishment, reportedly issued a sharp warning Monday to two of President Donald J. Trump’s top law enforcement appointees, urging them to take decisive action against what he described as entrenched corruption.
“Kash Patel and Pam Bondi, in six months, will not be in the DOJ and at the FBI if these indictments haven’t happened—period,” Jones declared on his online program. “That I can guarantee you. And I’m not saying they’re villains yet; I’m not saying they are weak yet. I’m just telling you right now that the American people want action. They want indictments, they want justice, they want retribution for what these crooks have done—open and shut.”
His demand for urgency comes on the heels of an FBI raid of former National Security Adviser John Bolton’s home and amid Mr. Trump’s calls for a criminal probe into former New Jersey governor Chris Christie.
Jones suggested that the desire for accountability is widespread among those who have seen the former president, and many of his allies, subjected to years of investigation.
“And don’t you think Trump, who they tried to kill multiple times and persecuted the living snot out of, don’t think he wants it more than anybody?” he said. “Don’t you think General Flynn, once they did all they did to him? So that’s the big takeaway.”
Jones insisted that new revelations were surfacing regarding Special Counsel Jack Smith and his team. “They got all this stuff now—all this communications, all the records, all the emails. And you talk about a police state, you talk about star chambers, you talk about tribunals, you talk about suspending habeas corpus, you talk about trying a thousand people at a time in D.C.—that was their plan. They’ve now got that.”
He added that DNI Director Tulsi Gabbard has uncovered material “infinitely worse than the bombshell stuff she’s released the last few months,” suggesting that further disclosures are imminent.
For Jones, the strategy is as much about information as it is about prosecutions. “It’s an info war,” he explained. “No, you open up with the artillery and the medium, and you expose the treason. And anybody from Tulsi Gabbard to Trump says they all—to JD Vance—says they all deserve to be in prison. And that the grand juries are going to open, and now they have. The criminal referrals, the grand juries, the strike forces—do you understand this is going down?”
He also pointed to a shake-up in the administration’s law enforcement team, citing the resignation of Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey to serve as co-deputy director of the FBI. “That’s because [Dan] Bongino will be leaving soon,” Jones asserted. “You heard that here five months ago from Carl Seraphine—now confirmed. Not a bad guy, but in over his head. And now Kash Patel has his replacement right there who was inches away from getting it and who is a thoroughbred prosecutor with elephant-sized testicles.”
Jones’s remarks underscored the impatience among many in the Trump-aligned movement, who argue that the time for investigations is over and that voters now demand accountability.
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