Jeffrey Epstein, Trump and Pam Bondi
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White House officials and other Trump allies said that the president, not the attorney general, has been the one having to answer questions about Jeffrey Epstein.
President Donald Trump on Thursday directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to release "any and all" grand jury testimony related to the disgraced, deceased financier.
Yes, the president is in the files, and his own administration provided that information back in February when Attorney General Pam Bondi released the “Epstein Files: Phase I.” While that release was a dud, featuring mostly redacted information and things that had already been reported, Trump’s name was there.
"All the work that we did to tell the world what happened to us, it’s all being erased," victim Danielle Bensky said.
Bipartisan pressure is mounting over the limited scope of the Justice Department's disclosures regarding Epstein.
The president’s directive follows weeks of uproar surrounding the handling of the so-called Epstein files and after Trump announced his plans to sue the Wall Street Journal after the paper published a bombshell report detailing a bawdy birthday card Trump allegedly gave to Jeffrey Epstein.
U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has requested a federal judge to unseal grand jury transcripts from the 2019 investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. This follows public concern over the Justice Department's July memo,
Live updates and the latest news as the Senate sends PBS, NPR, foreign aid clawbacks to the House and senators consider Emil Bove's nomination to a federal appeals court.
President Donald Trump says Attorney General Pam Bondi should release "whatever she thinks is credible" on Jeffrey Epstein.
A photo authentically depicts U.S. President Donald Trump, Attorney General Pam Bondi and the now-deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The photo is real, and it does show Trump and Epstein. However, the woman in the photo is Belgian model Ingrid Seynhaeve.