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Partisan pugnacity at Justice Dept.
Los Angeles Times
|October 08, 2025
Civil rights chief’s response to judge’s tragedy points to an us-vs.-them attitude.
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AFTER a judge's home burned, Harmeet Dhillon trolled a political foe.
On Saturday, a home belonging to a South Carolina circuit judge burned to the ground.
Three people, including the judge’s husband and son, were hospitalized with serious injuries.
The cause of the fire was not immediately clear. An investigation is underway.
Obviously, the harm and destruction were terrible things. But what turned that particular tragedy into something more frightful and ominous is the fact the judge had been targeted with death threats, after ruling against the Trump administration in a lawsuit involving the state’s voter files.
Last month, the judge, Diane Goodstein, temporarily blocked South Carolina from releasing data to the U.S. Department of Retribution, er, Justice, which is turning over tables in search of “facts” to bolster President Trump's lies about a stolen 2020 election.
Among those who criticized the decision, which was reversed by South Carolina’s Supreme Court, was Harmeet Dhillon, the San Francisco attorney who now heads the Justice Department’s beleaguered Civil Rights Division.
Here’s a short quiz.
Using professional norms and human decency as your guide, can you guess what Dhillon did in the aftermath of the fire?
A) Publicly consoled Goodstein and said the Justice Department would throw its full weight behind an urgent investigation into the fire.
B) Drew herself up in righteous anger and issued a ringing statement that denounced political violence, whatever its form, whether perpetrated by those on the left, right or center.
This story is from the October 08, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
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