Throughout the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly vowed to “indemnify” police officers from accountability for acts of misconduct they commit on the job.
Despite being a convicted felon himself, repeated complaints about the conduct of federal and local police and his leading role in a deadly insurrection attempt that injured scores of law enforcement officers, Trump is still working to portray himself as supportive of law enforcement, often by vowing to permit some officers’ violent and unlawful behavior. During the campaign, for example, he called for “one real rough, nasty” and “violent day” of police retaliation to eradicate crime “immediately.”
To that end, his Wednesday pardon of Metropolitan Police officers Terence Sutton and Andrew Zabavsky didn’t garner the level of attention as Trump’s Jan. 6 pardons or even his pardon of convicted drug dealer Ross Ulbricht — but it’s arguably just as egregious and foreboding.








