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Where Tyranny Begins

The Justice Department, the FBI, and the War on Democracy

Audiobook
83 of 83 copies available
83 of 83 copies available
Over the course of his presidency, Donald Trump intimidated, silenced, and bent to his will Justice Department and FBI officials. He sowed public doubt in both agencies so successfully that when he tried to overturn the results of the 2020 election, he paid little political cost and, despite an unprecedented array of criminal indictments, easily won the Republican nomination for the 2024 presidential election.
In Where Tyranny Begins, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist David Rohde investigates the strategies Trump systematically used to turn the country's two most powerful law-enforcement agencies into his personal political weapons. Rohde also reveals how, during the Biden years, Justice Department non-partisan 1970s norms that Attorney General Merrick Garland reinforced inadvertently helped Trump, and could fail to deliver a trial and legal accountability by Election Day 2024.
Where Tyranny Begins exposes how ill-suited both the DOJ and FBI are to serve as checks on abuses of presidential power. A round of historic reforms equivalent to the post-Watergate reforms that stabilized American democracy in the 1970s are immediately needed. A five-word warning coined by the English philosopher John Locke in 1689 captures the stakes in 2024: "Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 23, 2024
      In this robust account, Rohde (In Deep), NBC News’ national security editor, details Donald Trump’s outmaneuvering of the rule of law during and after his presidency. Rohde contends that “Trump successfully used online denigration, the rampant spread of conspiracy theories, and threats of violence to discredit, divide, and intimidate FBI and DOJ officials.” His argument is buttressed by interviews with government insiders, many of whom requested anonymity out of fear of retribution. Throughout, Rohde makes plain that those investigating Trump, including special counsel Robert Mueller, underestimated him by assuming he would be constrained by post-Watergate norms. Instead, Trump undermined public confidence in the Justice Department’s ability to do its job impartially, enabled by Fox News and his attorney general Bill Barr, who undercut the Mueller probe by presenting a misleading exculpatory summary of its findings. Even after Biden appointee Merrick Garland was at the helm of the Justice Department, his staff made errors that stymied the inquiry into Trump’s role in the January 6 insurrection. Much of Rohde’s material is familiar, though he peppers his account with new findings, such as background on the FBI’s decision not to subpoena records that could have identified plotters behind January 6: “Five years of Trump’s attacks had reduced the bureau’s appetite for risk.” Readers will be troubled.

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