Three weeks of Iran coverage buried this story. Here’s where it actually stands.

What’s Being Said
The DOJ’s official position: the subpoena is “completely unnecessary” because lawmakers have been invited to view unredacted files at the Department of Justice and Bondi has always made herself available to speak with members of Congress. CNN
Bondi’s own position, stated repeatedly: “I will follow the law.” CNN She has not said yes to the deposition.
Some Republicans are now softening. Rep. Lauren Boebert โ one of the five who voted for the subpoena โ told CNN she is “absolutely” considering withdrawing her support, saying it was “absolutely shameful” to have Bondi come in willingly and be treated the way she was. CNN
What’s Actually Known
Committee Chair James Comer issued the formal subpoena on March 17, requiring Bondi to appear before the committee on April 14. Substack
Democrats walked out of a closed-door briefing on March 18 after Bondi would not commit to complying with the subpoena for sworn testimony. NBC News Their position: the briefing was staged to avoid a deposition under oath.
Rep. Maxwell Frost put it directly: “To me, it’s very clear that the purpose of this entire fake hearing, this fake deposition, is the attorney general trying to weasel herself out of sitting in front of us under oath.” Substack
The enforcement problem hasn’t changed: if Bondi ignores the subpoena, enforcement falls to her own DOJ. The committee has the authority. The leverage is a different question.
On the documents themselves: the DOJ has released only 3.5 million of the 6 million pages in its possession. Oversight Democrats The DOJ has also been tracking which documents members of Congress are reading Oversight Democrats โ a detail that has drawn calls for Bondi’s resignation from Democratic members.
What’s Missing
Nobody is asking the structural question: what happens on April 15 if Bondi simply doesn’t show? The subpoena has a date. It does not have a consequence anyone has named on the record. The enforcement trap โ DOJ enforcing against its own AG โ remains unaddressed by every outlet covering this story.
TSM has an active 50-request FOIA campaign directly connected to this investigation thread. We’re watching what the documents say, not what the briefings claim.
What to Watch
April 14 is the deposition date. Between now and then: whether Boebert and other Republican crossover votes hold, whether Comer moves to enforce or negotiate, and whether the DOJ produces any additional files before the deadline. Any motion to quash would be the signal that this is heading toward a constitutional standoff โ not a compliance conversation.
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