FBI Director Kash Patel set Washington abuzz Friday morning with a cryptic message on X, posted just as federal agents swarmed the Bethesda, Md., home of Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton.
“NO ONE is above the law…@FBI agents on mission,” Patel declared at 7 a.m., without naming names. The timing left little doubt about what—or who—he was referring to, though he could’ve also been referring to others.
Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino piled on minutes later, posting: “Public corruption will not be tolerated.” He underscored this message in a Fox News appearance.
Vice President J.D. Vance also reshared Patel’s post, amplifying the message.
The FBI itself declined to comment on Patel’s statement or the raid, but sources confirmed that agents executed a search warrant tied to classified information. Bolton, a longtime Washington operative and one of Trump’s fiercest Republican critics, had his security clearance yanked and Secret Service detail removed earlier this year after Trump returned to office.
Bolton appeared unfazed Friday morning. Around the same time as the raid, he was online slamming Trump’s diplomatic efforts with Russia.
“Meetings will continue because Trump wants a Nobel Peace Prize,” Bolton sneered on X, insisting talks between Moscow and Kyiv were doomed because of Russia’s territorial demands.
The raid marks the latest flashpoint in a long and bitter feud between Trump and his onetime adviser, who left the administration on bad terms in 2019. Bolton has since made a career of trashing Trump on cable news, accusing him of being soft on dictators while cashing in with book deals.
For many conservatives, Bolton’s raid is a manifestation of the “boomerang effect.”
From the infamous Crossfire Hurricane probe launched in 2016 to Biden’s DOJ prosecutions years later, Trump-world has repeatedly been on the receiving end of weaponized government. Former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn was targeted and prosecuted under Obama’s DOJ, campaign adviser Carter Page was surveilled with unlawful FISA warrants, while Paul Manafort and George Papadopoulos were dragged into investigations over years-old business and foreign contacts.
Trump ally Roger Stone was raided at dawn by heavily armed FBI agents, his home swarmed with CNN cameras tipped off in advance.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon was charged with contempt of Congress under Biden’s DOJ for refusing to play along with the partisan January 6 committee, as was Trump Peter Navarro. Both men served short stints in prison after being prosecuted by the Biden administration.
To critics, these episodes all point to the same pattern: the FBI and DOJ acting as political weapons against Trump’s circle. As one GOP strategist put it at the time: “It’s lawfare, plain and simple.”
Now, with Kash Patel at the helm of the FBI, Trump’s allies argue the tables are finally turning. Patel’s cryptic “no one is above the law” message may have raised eyebrows inside the Beltway, but to the MAGA base it sounded like long-overdue accountability.
Still, the Bolton raid promises to stoke controversy. Was it a legitimate investigation into classified material—or payback against a loud Trump critic? The Biden years taught conservatives to be wary of raids on political figures.