Attorney General Pam Bondi Relocates to Secure Military Housing Amid Heightened Threats
- 17GEN4

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Washington, D.C. – March 11, 2026 – U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has been quietly relocated to secure government housing on a military base in the Washington, D.C. area, following an escalation in credible threats against her, according to multiple reports citing federal law enforcement sources.
The move, which occurred sometime in the past month, comes as Bondi faces dual pressures: intensified warnings from drug cartels linked to the Trump administration's aggressive actions against transnational crime networks, and widespread public and political backlash over the Department of Justice's handling of files related to the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Federal officials flagged specific threats to Bondi's security team, prompting the relocation from her previous apartment in the city to the heavily guarded military installation. A senior administration official told The New York Times that the immediate trigger involved an uptick in dangers following the recent capture and prosecution of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on drug-related charges, which heightened cartel-related risks for key U.S. officials involved in such operations.
Compounding the security concerns is ongoing controversy surrounding the Justice Department's release and management of Epstein-related documents. Bondi, who oversaw phases of declassification under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, has faced criticism from both sides of the aisle. Some conservative voices have accused her of insufficient transparency or redactions that shielded powerful figures, while Democrats and oversight committees have subpoenaed her to testify on alleged withholding of materials, including claims tied to high-profile individuals.
The House Oversight Committee recently voted to compel Bondi's testimony on the matter, with bipartisan support reflecting frustration over the pace and completeness of disclosures. Reports indicate that while millions of pages have been made public, gaps remain, fueling accusations of a cover-up and intensifying online and activist outrage directed at the Attorney General.
Bondi is not the only senior Trump administration figure to take up residence in such protected quarters. Officials including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, domestic policy adviser Stephen Miller, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and others have similarly moved to military housing amid their own security challenges, a trend that has raised questions among historians and former officials about the unprecedented use of taxpayer-funded military facilities for political appointees.
A spokesperson for the Attorney General confirmed the new living arrangement but declined to disclose the specific base location for obvious security reasons. The Department of Justice emphasized that the decision prioritizes the safety of its leadership during a period of elevated risks.



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