Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas swears in Pam Bondi as US Attorney General alongside her partner John Wakefield and mother Patsy Bondi, in the Oval Office at the White House on February 5, in Washington, DC.
CNN  — 

Attorney General Pam Bondi is expected to order a review of the cases brought against President Donald Trump, including those undertaken by prosecutors in New York who successfully defeated him in court.

Sworn in at the White House on Wednesday, Bondi intends to issue a series of memos aimed at curbing the so-called weaponization of the Justice Department, a source familiar her plans told CNN.

She will order the review of criminal and civil cases against Trump, including the two federal cases brought by the Biden Justice Department, and issue a warning to employees that serving their own personal politics as opposed to the Trump administration would be punished.

The memos, first reported by Fox News, are part of planned efforts to investigate and undo legal moves from the Biden administration, setting the tone for Bondi’s term as the top law enforcement official in the country.

In one memo, Bondi will establish a “Weaponization Working Group” to review law enforcement actions enacted under the Biden administration for any examples of “politicized justice.”

That review will cover cases brought by former special counsel Jack Smith over Trump’s handling of classified documents and 2020 election interference, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s hush-money case that led to a conviction and a case from New York Attorney General Letitia James, in which she won a $454 million civil fraud judgment against Trump.

In another memo, Bondi will warn career Justice Department officials that they cannot substitute their own political beliefs for the arguments that the Trump administration puts forward in court, and that if they try, they will be subject to disciplinary action or termination.

“The discretion afforded Justice Department attorneys with respect to those responsibilities does not include latitude to substitute their personal political views or judgments for those that prevailed in the election,” the memo reads.

Bondi’s first day comes amid a firestorm over firings of agents and prosecutors who have worked on cases related to Trump and the January 6, 2021, US Capitol riot.

She was sworn in by conservative Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, with Trump looking on.

“We’re going to make America safe again,” Bondi said in brief remarks at the White House

Trump complimented his pick for attorney general, saying in part that she will be “totally impartial.”

“I know I’m supposed to say she’s going to be totally impartial with respect to Democrats, and I think she will be as impartial as a person can be. I’m not sure if there’s a possibility of totally, but she’s going to be as total as you can get,” Trump said. “But she’s going to be fair, and she’ll lead the Department of Justice in crushing violent crime, demolishing the gangs, which are all over the place.”

A representative for New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg declined to comment. A spokesperson for the New York attorney general’s office did not have an immediate comment.

Trump has previously challenged the legitimacy of both cases in court and numerous judges rejected his arguments and declined to throw them out.

While a source familiar with the Trump administration’s strategy said there are “no plans for mass firings at the FBI,” agents remain concerned. The FBI handed over information about more than 5,000 employees who worked on the January 6 investigations after acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove demanded the information in a memo last week with the subject “Terminations.”

The source defended efforts to get additional information about officials who worked on January 6 cases as part of an effort to comply with Trump’s executive order directing a review of the Justice Department’s actions over the last four years in an attempt to end the “weaponization of government.”

“The messaging has not been as clear as it could be on the personnel matters,” the person said.

Bondi’s first moves in office will be under scrutiny. The former Florida state attorney general and staunch Trump ally swore to lawmakers during her confirmation hearing last month that she would protect the department from political motivations. But the Trump administration has touted Bondi’s ability to reshape the Justice Department to fit the president’s vision.

“Every case will be prosecuted based on the facts and the law that’s applied in good faith, period. Politics have got to be taken out of the system,” Bondi told the Senate Judiciary Committee. “This department has been weaponized for years and years and years, and it has to stop.”

Bondi is also expected to rescind memos issued under the Biden administration, including a 2023 FBI field office memo that seemed to suggest the FBI was targeting “radical traditionalist” Catholics, sources told CNN. The memo, which then-Attorney General Merrick Garland called “appalling,” was almost immediately pulled, but it was never officially rescinded.

She will also rescind a 2021 memo from Garland that addressed the “disturbing spike in harassment, intimidation, and threats of violence” levied at schools, sources said.

The memo sparked months of backlash and false claims that Garland believed parents who were concerned about education policy were “domestic terrorists,” though a federal judge ultimately disagreed with that characterization.

Bondi also plans to establish a new task force focused on Hamas’ October 7, 2023, attack in Israel. That task force, she said, will bring criminal charges against Hamas leadership and investigate anti-Semitism in the United States.

Some of Bondi’s directives follow through on aggressive law-enforcement and prosecutorial policies that Trump also pushed for in his first term, including reinvigorating death penalty cases and aggressively targeting drug cartels.

She will also create guidelines that mimicked an earlier directive from Bove, telling the department to pause all federal funding for sanctuary cities and evaluate all funding agreements with NGOs that provide support to migrants who are in the United States illegally.

The interim Justice Department leadership has already instructed leaders of the FBI to provide information about all current and former bureau employees who “at any time” worked on January 6 investigations, and the top federal prosecutor in DC launched an investigation into prosecutors who brought obstruction charges against some rioters that were ultimately tossed because of a Supreme Court decision last summer.

The Senate confirmed Bondi on Tuesday evening in a 54-46 vote. The vote was mostly along party lines, with Democratic Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania joining Republicans in supporting Bondi.

Department already in transition

The second Trump administration was expected to more successful in crafting its executive orders and policies to withstand court challenges, but so far that has not proven to be the case in the early going, despite prioritizing staffing of its Civil Division.

Bondi will face the immediate challenge to defend new Trump policies in court where DOJ has already faced repeated blows, as two federal judges issued orders temporarily blocking the administration’s plans to freeze all federal aid, and a third judge blocked Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship, calling it “blatantly unconstitutional.”

Within the first few days of the Trump administration, at least 20 high-level, career prosecutors across the department were removed from posts they’ve held for years, CNN has reported. The move happened well before Bondi was confirmed in an effort to insulate her from criticism, sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

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Sen. Hirono presses Bondi on 2020 election results
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Several of those career prosecutors were reassigned to a new task force handling Trump’s crackdown on immigration, some of the prosecutors told CNN. That task force was revealed in a memo to all department staff from Bove that threatened to investigate or prosecute state and local officials, as well as federal prosecutors, who resist joining Trump’s federal immigration crackdown.

The department also fired officials who worked on Smith’s team, and ordered eight senior FBI leaders to retire, resign or be fired.

Interim department leaders began issuing additional memos to department staff informing them of further changes in the way the department would operate moving forward.

One of those memos halted agreements that require reforms of police departments where the Justice Department found a pattern of misconduct, while a second ordered civil rights attorneys to not “file any new complaints, motions to intervene, agreed-upon remands, amicus briefs, or statements of interest” until further notice.

A third memo instructed prosecutors to limit prosecutions under the FACE Act, a law that “prohibits threats of force, obstruction and property damage intended to interfere with reproductive health care services.” That memo also told prosecutors to drop ongoing cases charged under the act.

The department has dropped other criminal cases too, including one against a doctor accused of illegally accessing medical records showing that a Texas hospital was performing gender-affirming care for trans minors, as well as civil suits brought by the Biden administration, like one challenging Virginia’s purge of voters from the rolls in the weeks before the election using data indicating that voters might be non-citizens.

CNN’s Samantha Waldenberg contributed to this report.

This story has been updated with Bondi’s order on Trump investigations.