Perpetual Oversight, Perpetual Profit: Consent Decrees As Political Patronage

- June 4, 2026
0 views 4 min
1 minute read

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent acknowledged Wednesday that he threatened to “kick ass” during a heated confrontation last year, while firmly denying reports that he threatened to punch the now-acting Director of National Intelligence “in the face.”

The unusual exchange emerged during a Senate Finance Committee hearing, where Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) pressed Bessent about reports surrounding a confrontation between the two Trump administration officials during the summer of 2025.

According to Bessent, one key detail in the widely circulated account was inaccurate.

While he denied threatening.

+ posts

Seijah Drake was born in Boston, MA, where she developed a penchant for writing early on and a passion for politics in college. After college she worked briefly for a conservative media in New York before relocating to the Greater D.C. Area to pursue a career in political marketing. She now resides in the free state of Florida.

Screenshot via X [Credit: @amuse]
7 minute read

One of the defining features of any bureaucracy, and indeed one of its great dangers, is its capacity to perpetuate itself long after its purpose has been fulfilled. Nowhere is this more vividly illustrated than in the federal government’s use of consent decrees, court-enforceable settlements imposed upon cities, school districts, state agencies, and private companies. Though intended as temporary remedies to past violations, many of these decrees have become functionally permanent, not because they still serve the public interest, but because they serve a far more parochial one: enriching Democratic-aligned lawyers who profit from their indefinite continuation.

This is not an incidental feature of the system; it is a defining one. As Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, Harmeet Dhillon, recently told the Epoch Times, not a single party currently under a consent decree has voluntarily sought to have it lifted. Not one. Some of these decrees date back to the 1940s, yet no city, school board, or agency has knocked on the Department of Justice’s door to say, “Mission accomplished. Release us.”

Why not? The answer, while politically unflattering, is economically rational. Local officials, especially in Democrat-controlled jurisdictions, often maintain cozy relationships with the very law firms appointed to negotiate or monitor these decrees. These firms, in turn, make generous campaign contributions to those same officials. What we are witnessing is not just a legal mechanism to correct institutional misconduct. It is a shadow patronage system, a jobs program for well-connected lawyers cloaked in the respectable garments of civil rights and regulatory reform.

The numbers speak for themselves. In Cleveland, where a police consent decree has been in effect since 2015, monitors have billed the city over $6 million. In Chicago, similar monitoring has cost the city $14 million over five years. Seattle has spent over $100 million complying with its own police decree, with a sizable portion of that figure allocated to monitors and legal consultants. In New Orleans, taxpayers shell out roughly $1.4 million annually just to pay the monitor’s fees. Detroit was under dual DOJ consent decrees from 2003 to 2016, costing tens of millions in legal and compliance expenses. In Oakland, California, the police department has been under federal supervision for over two decades. Los Angeles County has similarly faced millions in legal oversight expenses over jail conditions since 2015. These monitors often bill at rates north of $300 per hour, and in some cases, as with Ferguson, Missouri, the outside counsel retained to handle negotiations billed as high as $1,300 per hour.

Such staggering sums are not the domain of public defenders or civil servants. They accrue to elite attorneys, many of them from white-shoe law firms or politically connected consulting groups, who have turned consent decree oversight into a specialized and highly remunerative niche. These are not public interest crusaders toiling in obscurity. They are beneficiaries of a system that rewards delay, prolongs resolution, and punishes finality. And here is the central paradox: given how much these cities, school districts, and corporations are paying to these lawyers year after year, why have they never sought to have the decrees ended? If the goal is reform, and the reform has been achieved, or at least paid for in full, why no motion to terminate? The answer lies not in legal necessity, but in political convenience and financial incentives.

It is worth emphasizing that this practice disproportionately benefits a particular ideological class. Major firms such as WilmerHale, Covington & Burling, and Sheppard Mullin have played prominent roles in consent decree oversight and have long track records of contributing to Democratic political campaigns and causes. These contributions are not merely coincidental. They reinforce a feedback loop in which legal power, political influence, and lucrative contracts rotate among a narrow set of elite actors. While government lawyers enforcing the decrees earn standard federal salaries, the lion’s share of the financial windfall flows to private-sector attorneys, monitors, and compliance officers. And these actors are not ideologically neutral. The legal firms and compliance specialists tapped for these roles are overwhelmingly staffed by attorneys who contribute to Democratic campaigns, support progressive legal organizations, and reinforce the institutional power of the left-leaning bar.

This helps explain the curious passivity of Democratic local officials who are ostensibly being punished or constrained by these decrees. One would think that a city under federal oversight would wish to regain its autonomy. And yet, silence. More precisely, calculated silence. To lift a decree would be to cut off a steady stream of legal retainers and monitoring contracts to friendly firms. It would mean disappointing campaign contributors, drying up speaking engagements, and reducing the flow of prestige-laden appointments to commissions and oversight boards. Better, from their perspective, to let the decree linger.

This is not to say that all consent decrees are unjustified or that they serve no public purpose. Some have led to meaningful improvements in policing, prison conditions, and environmental compliance. But when a decree lasts longer than a generation, outliving the officials who signed it and the problems it purported to fix, its legitimacy must be reexamined. Without a built-in expiration date or active oversight from a vigilant DOJ, these decrees tend to metastasize into perpetual legal guardianships. At some point, a government governed indefinitely by a federal judge ceases to be self-governing. These decrees, absent reform, transform into a form of legal colonization, sustained not by necessity, but by inertia and vested interest. The underlying issues may have abated. The financial incentives to say otherwise have not.

Fortunately, change is underway. Under President Trump and General Pam Bondi, Harmeet Dhillon’s Civil Rights Division has begun the long-overdue process of terminating decrees that have outlived their utility. This includes not only ancient antitrust agreements, some dating back to the Coolidge administration, but also school desegregation orders from the 1960s that now amount to federal micromanagement of racially integrated school districts.

In one telling example, the DOJ finally moved to terminate a desegregation order in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, that had been in place since 1966. This decree lingered for nearly sixty years, not because the schools remained segregated, but because no one had taken the political or legal initiative to declare the job done. As the Assistant Attorney General Dhillon put it, its continuation was a historical wrong in and of itself.

This raises the question: how many more such decrees remain on the books, governing everything from music licensing to municipal hiring, simply because the beneficiaries of the system prefer inertia to reform? DOJ data from 2018 estimated 1,300 such legacy antitrust decrees, many of them without expiration clauses. In the environmental domain, over 100 new decrees are signed each year, adding to an already substantial backlog. School desegregation orders still cover more than 100 districts, often in jurisdictions where student populations have dramatically changed or diversified.

The solution is not merely administrative. It must be legislative. Congress should amend federal law to require all new consent decrees to include a mandatory sunset clause, ten years, with a provision for renewal only upon substantial and independently verified need. Courts should be encouraged to scrutinize legacy decrees with an eye toward termination, particularly where no active party has moved to renew or enforce their terms.

More ambitiously, Congress should consider requiring an annual DOJ report cataloging all active consent decrees, their age, their costs, and the identity of the firms and individuals profiting from them. Sunlight may not be a disinfectant in every instance, but it is a powerful solvent against bureaucratic calcification and political patronage.

To those who defend the status quo, it is worth asking a simple question: if these decrees are still so vital, why has no covered entity requested their removal, even after fifty or sixty years? The silence is not noble. It is mercenary.

At its best, the American legal system uses consent decrees to right institutional wrongs. At its worst, it converts those wrongs into open-ended annuities for politically connected lawyers. The time has come to distinguish between the two.

If you enjoy my work, please consider subscribing: https://x.com/amuse.

Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.

READ NEXT: [WATCH] Gunfire Erupts During Ambassadors’ Visit To Israel

Picture of Alexander Muse • amuse on 𝕏

Alexander Muse • amuse on 𝕏

Alexander Muse has been delivering sharp conservative headlines and opinion editorials using the amuse on 𝕏 handle since 2007. His in-depth political analysis is available here through American Liberty. His work is read in the White House, the halls of Congress, on K Street, and by prominent Americans, including Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Donald Trump Jr. Ranked among the top 200 most-followed Premium 𝕏 accounts, his content drives over four billion impressions annually. Follow him on 𝕏 https://x.com/amuse.

1 Comment
    Stephen Russell

    Need to redefine Consent decrees overall or $$ for Dems & DC Estd

Leave a Reply

Security

0 views
American Liberty News
0 views
American Liberty News
0 views
American Liberty News

US Considers Expanding NATO Nuclear-Sharing Program Into Eastern Europe: Report

The United States is reportedly discussing a significant expansion of NATO's nuclear-sharing
- June 2, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News

Trump Names Housing Finance Leader Bill Pulte As Acting DNI

The FHFA director will lead the U.S. intelligence community on an acting
- June 2, 2026

Foreign Affairs

0 views
American Liberty News

California Tech CEO Arrested For Allegedly Supplying US Equipment To Iran’s Nuclear Program

A California technology company CEO has been arrested and charged with allegedly
- June 3, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News
0 views
American Liberty News

French Left-Wing Leader Claims France Was Never A White Or Christian Nation

A senior leader of France's hard-left La France Insoumise (LFI) party is
- June 2, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News

US Considers Expanding NATO Nuclear-Sharing Program Into Eastern Europe: Report

The United States is reportedly discussing a significant expansion of NATO's nuclear-sharing
- June 2, 2026

Business & economics

0 views
American Liberty News

Insider Trading Investigation Launched Into Ex-Congressman George Santos

Disgraced former Congressman George Santos is once again under federal scrutiny, this time
- June 3, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News
0 views
American Liberty News

Treasury Department Proposes Commemorative $250 Bill Featuring Trump Portrait

President Donald Trump may soon become the face of a brand-new $250 bill
- May 30, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News

Report: Billionaire Republican Businessman Flees America Amid Rising Taxes

Silicon Valley billionaire and longtime Trump ally Peter Thiel has reportedly moved his
- May 29, 2026

heath & science

0 views
American Liberty News
0 views
American Liberty News

How Ken Paxton Finally Brought Texas Children’s Hospital To Justice

There is a particular kind of public servant who treats a press release
0 views
American Liberty News

Longtime Florida Democrat Frederica Wilson To Retire From Congress

Rep. Frederica Wilson announced Friday that she will retire from Congress at the
- May 29, 2026
0 views
American Liberty News

Trump Team Reportedly Moving Ebola-Exposed Americans To Kenya

The Trump administration is preparing to quarantine and potentially treat Americans exposed to
- May 27, 2026

American Liberty Arms

GunTuber Legend Dugan Ashley Arrested By Feds: Free Speech Concerns, And What It Could Mean For Content Creators

By The Notorious FDE TacticalSh!t In the wild world of gun content on YouTube, few names carry

NRA, FPC, SAF Sue Maryland Over Glock-Style Handgun Ban

By AmmoLand Editor Duncan Johnson Ammoland Maryland Gov. Wes Moore signed SB 334 into law, and

Virginia Officials Rebel: Sheriffs And Prosecutors Refuse To Enforce New Gun Ban

By John Crump Ammoland As the deadline for the new Virginia gun laws approaches, Governor Abigail Spanberger’s master

Pakistan Deploys Thousands Of Troops, Jet Fighter Squadron To Saudi Arabia

Pakistan has deployed 8,000 troops, a ​squadron of fighter jets, and an air defense system to

At American Liberty News, we eschew the mainstream media’s tightly controlled narrative to provide our readers with real news, real insights, and the means to take action. We seek out insightful coverage – and partner with knowledgeable and experienced people and organizations to bring you the information and insight our readers demand.

 

We humbly seek to provide the tools and information necessary for our readers to decide for themselves what is true and what is right.

American Liberty News ©2024

Evolution Digital Media

1900 Reston Metro Plz

Suite 600

Reston, VA 20190