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US attorney general paves way for more convicted criminals to own guns | Donald Trump News

Pam Bondi says the proposed change will give her discretion over who can own firearms, in a move opposed by gun control groups.

Washington, DC – United States Attorney General Pam Bondi has begun a process to make it easier for individuals with criminal convictions to own guns.

The move on Friday comes amid a wider push by the administration of President Donald Trump to make good on campaign promises to gun rights groups, which criticise restrictions on firearm ownership as violations of the Constitution’s Second Amendment. Trump ordered a review of government gun policies in February.

Gun control advocates, meanwhile, have voiced concerns over the administration’s ability to adequately assess which convicted individuals would not pose a public safety risk.

In a statement released on Friday, Bondi said individuals with serious criminal convictions have been “disenfranchised from exercising the right to keep and bear arms — a right every bit as constitutionally enshrined as the right to vote, the right to free speech, and the right to free exercise of religion — irrespective of whether they actually pose a threat”.

“No longer,” she added.

Under the plan, Bondi seeks to return the power to determine which individuals convicted of crimes can own firearms directly to her office.

That exemption process has currently been overseen by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. However, Congress has, for decades, used its spending approval powers to stem the processing of exemption requests.

The Department of Justice said the proposed change “will provide citizens whose firearm rights are currently under legal disability with an avenue to restore those rights, while keeping firearms out of the hands of dangerous criminals and illegal aliens”.

The US attorney general would have “ultimate discretion to grant relief”, according to the department.

It added that, “absent extraordinary circumstances”, certain individuals would be “presumptively ineligible” for the restoration of their gun rights. They include “violent felons, registered sex offenders, and illegal aliens”.

The plan was outlined in a “proposed rule” submitted to the Federal Register on Friday. It will undergo a final public comment period before it is adopted.

In Friday’s statement, US Pardon Attorney Edward Martin Jr said that his team was already developing a “landing page with a sophisticated, user-friendly platform for Americans petitioning for the return of their gun rights, which will make the process easier for them”.

When details of Bondi’s plan initially emerged in March, the gun control group Brady was among those who voiced opposition.

“If and when gun rights are restored to an individual, it needs to be through a robust and thoughtful system that minimizes the risk to public safety,” the group’s president, Kris Brown, said in a statement.

She added that Trump’s restoration of gun rights to those who were convicted — and later pardoned — for their role in the storming of the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, raised concerns over how the administration would exercise its discretion.

“This would be a unilateral system to give gun rights back to those who are dangerous and high risk, and we will all be at greater risk of gun violence,” she said.

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Trump says Attorney General Bondi should release ‘credible’ information on Epstein

Watch: Trump says Pam Bondi should release ‘credible’ Epstein files

US President Donald Trump has said Attorney General Pam Bondi should release “whatever she thinks is credible” on sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as he faces a rare backlash from supporters after seeking to draw a line under the case.

Bondi has been lambasted by some of Trump’s political base after she said last week there was no evidence that Epstein kept a “client list” or was blackmailing powerful figures.

At the weekend Trump urged supporters not to “waste time and energy” on the controversy. But allies of the president, including House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson, are calling for “transparency”.

Epstein’s 2019 death in a US prison while awaiting federal trial was ruled a suicide.

But many in Trump’s Make America Great Again (Maga) movement have theorised that details of the well-connected convicted paedophile’s crimes have been withheld in order to protect influential figures, or intelligence agencies.

On Tuesday, Trump praised his attorney general’s handling of the matter, saying: “She’s handled it very well, and it’s going to be up to her. Whatever she thinks is credible, she should release.”

When asked by a journalist if the attorney general had told Trump whether his name appeared in any of the records, he said: “No, no.”

Later on Tuesday, the president again called for the release of “credible” information, but he questioned the enduring fascination with the Epstein case, calling it “sordid but boring”.

“Only really bad people, including the fake news, want to keep something like this going,” Trump said.

Last week he vented frustration in the Oval Office about the fixation on Epstein and urged everyone to move on.

But some Republican allies of the president are not letting go of the matter.

In an interview on Tuesday with US conservative commentator Benny Johnson, Speaker Johnson said that he trusted President Trump and his team, and that the White House was privy to facts that he did not know.

But he said Bondi “needs to come forward and explain it to everybody”.

“We should put everything out there and let the people decide,” Johnson said in an interview.

Georgia congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene told Benny Johnson in a separate interview on Tuesday: “I fully support transparency on this issue.”

She praised Bondi’s work as attorney general, but said that leaders and elected officials should keep their promises to voters.

Getty Images US Attorney General Pam Bondi photographed testifying before the Senate Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on June 25, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images

Pam Bondi has said the memo released last week on Epstein by the Department of Justice “speaks for itself.”

Another conservative Republican, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, said if more Epstein files were not released, a special counsel should be appointed to investigate the financier’s crimes.

Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana said the voters expect more accountability.

“I think it’s perfectly understandable that the American people would like to know who he [Epstein] trafficked those women to and why they weren’t prosecuted,” Kennedy told NBC News.

But other influential Republicans – including Senator John Thune and congressman Jim Jordan – deferred to President Trump on the matter.

Bloomberg via Getty Images US House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican from Louisiana, speaks to members of the media while arriving for a meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister on July 8, 2025.Bloomberg via Getty Images

“We should put everything on the table and let the people decide,” says Johnson

At an unrelated news conference on fentanyl on Tuesday, Bondi brushed aside questions about the controversy.

“Nothing about Epstein,” she told reporters. “I’m not going to talk about Epstein.”

She said last week’s memo by the Department of Justice, jointly released with the FBI, declining to release any further files on Epstein and confirming his death by suicide, “speaks for itself”.

Bondi told Fox News in February that a list of Epstein clients was on her desk for review, before her spokesman said last week she had actually been referring to overall files in the case.

The government’s findings were made, according to the memo, after reviewing more than 300 gigabytes of data.

On Tuesday, House Democratic lawmakers tried unsuccessfully to force a vote on releasing Epstein files.

Republicans pointed out the administration of President Joe Biden, a Democrat, also had access to the files, but did not release them.

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