jeffrey epstein, Justice Department
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Epstein, Trump
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Attorney General Pam Bondi reportedly informed President Donald Trump in May that his name appeared in Epstein-related files.
House lawmakers ran to catch flights Wednesday afternoon -- leaving for their August recess a day early -- without taking a substantive vote on releasing the Epstein files. On their way out the door, some Republicans acknowledged they're bracing for serious Epstein-related questions from the MAGA base when they get home.
2hon MSN
Attorney General Pam Bondi is facing Democratic calls to testify before Congress following a newspaper's revelation that she told President Donald Trump that his name appeared in the files of the Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking investigation.
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A bipartisan group of lawmakers defied House GOP leadership and voted in support of an effort to force the Justice Department to turn over the Jeffrey Epstein files to Congress.
The case of Jeffrey Epstein, sex offender and former friend of the president, has blown up into a major headache for the White House.
The attorney general reportedly told President Donald Trump in the spring he was named multiple times in the government's files on Jeffrey Epstein.
The battle over releasing documents tied to the Jeffrey Epstein case has created a rare bipartisan push in Congress.
OBAMA'S REBUKE: Former President Barack Obama’s office issued a rebuke of Trump yesterday over his accusation that his predecessor committed “treason” and rigged the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections.