America under Biden was a train wreck. And we’re only now starting to see the true toll.
Because Biden’s DOJ came under fire yet again for having political prisoners.
Pro-Lifers Vindicated as Trump’s Justice Department Exposes Biden’s War on Christians
For years, peaceful Christians were raided at dawn, prosecuted for praying, and sentenced to federal prison for their pro-life beliefs. The Biden Department of Justice didn’t just look the other way at left-wing violence — it actively partnered with abortion industry groups to hunt these people down. Now the reckoning has arrived, and at least one of the victims of that abuse is ready to celebrate.
When news broke of the DOJ’s sweeping personnel clean-out — with prosecutors who weaponized the FACE Act against peaceful pro-life advocates shown the door — one imprisoned pro-lifer responded with a message that summed up the mood of a movement long treated as enemy combatants by their own government: “I want to come to some firing parties.”
A Two-Tiered Justice System, Finally Documented
The proof isn’t anecdotal — it’s mountainous. The Trump Justice Department’s Weaponization Working Group reviewed more than 700,000 internal records, producing an 882-page report that lays out in forensic detail how the Biden DOJ weaponized the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act almost exclusively against pro-life Americans while turning a blind eye to well over 90 fire-bombings, vandalism attacks, and assaults on pregnancy resource centers.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche left no ambiguity: “This Department will not tolerate a two-tiered system of justice. No Department should conduct selective prosecution based on beliefs. The weaponization that happened under the Biden Administration will not happen again, as we restore integrity to our prosecutorial system.”
Assistant Attorney General Daniel Burrows added: “The behavior unearthed in this report is shameful. Lawyers who should have known better withheld evidence, worked to keep committed religious people off juries, and generally allowed the Department of Justice to be used as the enforcement arm of pro-abortion special interests.”
The Man at the Center
At the epicenter of the scandal was Sanjay Patel, a Civil Rights Division prosecutor who was one of the four fired in connection with the report. Patel ran the National Task Force on Violence Against Reproductive Health Care Providers and was on a texting-term, first-name basis with the National Abortion Federation’s security director. In one explosive email, Patel described her as an “MVP bringing incidents to my attention, often in real-time, which usually result in investigation/prosecution.” Abortion groups fed the Biden DOJ dossiers on peaceful Christian activists — their home addresses, travel plans, family photographs, social media posts — all of which the government used to build cases against people who had not yet been charged with any crime.
The numbers make the imbalance impossible to dismiss. The Biden DOJ sought average sentences of 26.8 months for pro-life defendants — more than double the 12.3 months sought for pro-abortion defendants. An 89-year-old woman. A Catholic priest. A mother with seven children whose FBI raid her pajama-clad husband witnessed through the front window. These were Biden’s “criminals.”
The Path to Accountability
Trump had already pardoned nearly two dozen of those unjustly targeted when he returned to office. Now the DOJ has taken the next step, firing the attorneys responsible and issuing a directive that FACE Act prosecutions may only proceed in “extraordinary circumstances or in cases presenting significant aggravating factors.” Three Biden-era civil lawsuits against non-violent pro-life activists have been dismissed with prejudice.
For the Christians who endured years of federal prosecution for singing hymns and sitting silently outside abortion clinics, the DOJ’s own admission that it served as the “enforcement arm of pro-abortion special interests” is a long-overdue vindication. And if some of them want to hold a few “firing parties” to mark the occasion — who could blame them?
