Letters from an American - A Very Big Deal Indeed
Episode Date: June 10, 2026June 9, 2026A Very Big Deal IndeedTrump has officially nominated Todd Blanche to become attorney general of the United States, Blanche as formerly Trump’s personal attorney who led the defense team ...in the case of falsifying records and in the cases for trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election and retaining classified documents, Blanche has flouted the law to do Trump’s bidding, The nomination challenges Republican senators to ignore rank and file Republicans, and to break the law, The DOJ has ignored the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and Epstein survivors are being threatened by Trump supporters, This nomination encourages the DOJ to bless wide ranging corruption, from allowing foreign interests to invest in Trump family businesses in exchange for preferential treatment, allowing Middle East billionaires to buy access to the president, and to make billions in a crypto currency business that has generated losses for more than a million investors duped by the promise of investing in a Trump business, Reports reveal massive fraud by Hungary’s Viktor Orban before he lost his bid for re-election, Trump is attempting to prevent the kind of defections in his rank that Orban suffered by forcing Republican senators to vote for Blanche’s confirmation, The Blanche confirmation is a very big deal. Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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June 9, 26.
Yesterday afternoon, President Donald J. Trump
officially nominated Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche
to become the Attorney General of the United States.
Before going to the Department of Justice,
Blanche was Trump's personal attorney.
He led Trump's criminal defense team
in the case of falsifying records
to cover up hush money payments
to adult film actress Stormy Daniels,
as well as his defense against the two cases brought
by special counsel Jack Smith, the one indicting him for trying to overturn the results of the 2020
presidential election, and the one indicting him for retaining classified documents after leaving office.
Since he took over for former Attorney General Pam Bondi, Blanche has openly flouted the law
in order to do Trump's bidding. He secured indictments against people Trump perceives to be enemies,
including former FBI director James Comey for posting on Instagram a page.
picture of seashells, arranged to form the number 86-47. He backed the deal Trump made with the Department
of Justice to establish a $1.776 billion slush fund to pay off those convicted of committing crime
surrounding Trump's attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election, including storming the
U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. Blanche put his name to the second half of that deal that seems to be
being eclipsed by the slush fund, an agreement between Trump and the Department of Justice
promising to drop any pending claims against Trump, his oldest sons, or the Trump organization
for past illegalities in tax returns and promising not to conduct audits of Trump's tax returns.
In the 1920s, gangster Al Capone kept his hands clean of direct evidence of the crimes he committed.
the federal government finally took him down by convicting him of federal income tax evasion.
Trump's nomination of Blanche directly challenges Republican senators to collude with him to flout the will of rank-and-file Republicans and break the law.
In November 2025, the Senate voted unanimously to pass the Epstein-Files Transparency Act.
This law required the Department of Justice to release.
all the files compiled by the FBI in its investigation of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,
no later than December 19, 2025. The Department of Justice has ignored that law. To date, it has
released about half the files. Many of those it is released are heavily redacted, although the law
expressly prohibits such redactions. Instead, the Department of Justice released previously unknown
names of Epstein's survivors. Mike Spector and Linda So of Reuters reported yesterday that those
survivors are now under threat from Trump supporters. She'll be unalived, someone wrote under a news
report of an accuser demanding the release of the files. She really should have stayed quiet.
RIP. In her testimony before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee,
Bondi told members of Congress that Blanche was in charge of the process and the entire release of the Epstein files.
Bondi also said that she had nothing to do with the transfer of Epstein's associate, Gielane Maxwell, a convicted sex offender, from prison to a minimum security camp.
As Annie Greyer, M.J. Lee, Paula Reed, and Marshall Cohen of CNN reported, that transfer happened just after Blanche interviewed.
Maxwell for nine hours. In that interview, Maxwell said nothing that would tie Trump to Epstein's
crimes, language Trump loyalists used to push back against the story reported just weeks before
by Khadija Safdar and Joe Palazolo in the Wall Street Journal that what appears to be Trump's signature
is at the bottom of a birthday card to Epstein, suggesting the two shared a wonderful secret. The words were written
over a drawing of a naked girl.
Maga Republicans supported Trump in 2024
because he promised to release the Epstein files,
and Senate Republicans responded to their anger
that the Trump administration was hiding those files
by voting unanimously to require, not request, their release.
Now Trump is demanding they abandon those voters
to put the man behind that cover-up into office
as the top law enforcement officer in the country.
As David Kurtz of Talking Points memo explained today,
if Republican senators confirm Blanche,
they will be rubber stamping Trump's perversion of the Department of Justice
and encouraging it to continue,
blessing wide-ranging and extreme corruption.
No accountability, no roadblocks, no pumping the brakes.
That rubber stamp on criminality,
would fall just as the corruption of the administration has become too obvious to pretend doesn't exist.
New stories out today examine new aspects of that corruption.
Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott, and Alex Murgesky of ProPublica reported that an Indian billionaire
appears to have gotten Trump to ease sanctions against his family's energy empire by investing
$100 million in a Texas startup company in which
Donald Trump Jr. is an investor.
Upon the Umbani family's investment in America First refining,
the startup secured beneficial U.S. policies for which it had been lobbying.
The journalists report that longstanding problems with the company
make it unlikely that the refinery America First has promised will ever get built,
especially at a time when refineries are expensive and unprofitable.
The journalists note that it has become
a theme of Trump's second term. Overseas investors with interests before the administration,
putting money into the Trump family's business interests. Last December, looking only at publicly
disclosed investments, the one the journalists uncovered today, was secret. Forbes estimated that
Don Jr's net worth had jumped from about $50 million to about $300 million since the 2024 election.
In Mother Jones today, Scholar of Corruption Casey Michelle,
explored the many connections between Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner
and Middle East billionaires who have invested billions
in his investment fund affinity partners,
essentially buying access to the president and U.S. policymaking,
even as the inexperienced Kushner represents the U.S. in sensitive negotiations in the region.
Kushner's plans include a deal for a 1.6 billion.
billion dollar tourist resort in Albania, along a stretch of coastline and a pristine island protected
as a critical area of biodiversity. Critics claim Prime Minister Eddie Rama backed the Affinity
Partners project to curry favor with the Trump administration. Protesters have taken to the streets
in Albania's capital, Tirana, chanting, Albania is not for sale and calling for Rama's resignation.
White House press spokesperson Anna Kelly told Mitt Hill Agarval,
Roth Sanchez, and Moabas of NBC News that Kushner is a volunteer for the government
and that his business activities have nothing to do with the president or the administration.
Asked if Rama's government had backed the project to gain favor with Trump, she said,
this is the same tired narrative that Democrats have pushed against President Trump,
his family and his administration for a decade. An investigation by Tom Bergen, Michelle Conlon,
Kogui Ching, and Tom Wilson of Reuters today shows that the Trump family has made at least
$2.3 billion in their cryptocurrency licensing adventures since Trump began his second term.
It also shows that more than a million people who invested in their enterprises have suffered at least
$2.3 billion in losses.
The journalists report that the investors they interviewed
believed that Trump's position as president
and what they perceived as his business acumen
guaranteed they would make money.
Some said they still hold on to the hope
that Trump will make things right.
Others expressed regret, anger, and embarrassment.
Trump and MAGA Republicans
celebrated the model of governance used by Prime Minister of Hungary Victor Orban during his 16 years in power,
calling for the U.S. government to mimic his rejection of immigration,
undermining of the rule of law, and destruction of liberal democracy
in favor of what Orban called illiberal democracy or Christian democracy.
After voters threw out Orban and his party with a supermajority that would empower the country's
new leaders to investigate their predecessors, the extraordinary corruption is coming to light.
Martin Dunei of the Financial Times reported today that tracking the financial transactions of the
Orban government has shown that it siphoned off at least 160 billion euros, equivalent to
about $185 billion from European Union funds, with the corruption peaking in Orban's last year
in office as loyalists worked to grab what they could as Orban's power was crumbling.
But as Andrew Higgins and Lily Routai reported in the New York Times, just before the election
that swept Orban and his party out of power, many Orban loyalists jumped ship.
Although they risked government persecution from Orban should he win re-election, they took the gamble
that the future belonged not to him, but to his.
opponents. Trump appears to be trying to prevent such defections in the ranks of the Republican
senators by forcing them to confirm Blanche, thus rubber-stamping his perversion of the rule of law,
and joining him in his utter disregard of the demand of Republican voters for the release of the
Epstein files. There may well be an effort to downplay the Blanche confirmation process, but
make no mistake, it is a very big deal indeed.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
