Jeffrey Epstein, Trump
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The Justice Department and FBI are struggling to contain the fallout from the decision to withhold records from the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking investigation. What do you think?
A promise to expose a corrupt elite has turned into a perceived cover up, and the powerful online influencers who helped elect Donald Trump are now in open revolt.
On Monday, the Justice Department and the FBI released a memo evoking outrage from both President Donald Trump’s critics and his most ardent supporters.
Jeffrey Epstein's case continues years after his death, with new images of Maxwell in prison and a government memo upholds suicide while revealing over 1,000 victims
From Jeffrey Epstein's 2005 case to his death in a New York jail cell in 2019, the crazy twists and turns in his bizarre sex crimes case in Florida.
It’s hard to believe that not so long ago people actually thought I was a good guy. And now people are ashamed to say they knew me.” That’s what a forlorn Jeffrey Epstein told me just weeks before his July 2019 arrest for sex trafficking of minors and subsequent suicide in his jail cell.
Dan Bongino clashed with Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles in a heated meeting about the Epstein memo that found no client list existed.
The FBI and Department of Justice said this week the convicted sex offender had "no incriminating client list."
As he tried to quell a revolt among his own MAGA supporters who are furious about what they believe is a Jeffrey Epstein “coverup,” President Donald Trump perhaps inadvertently bestowed a bizarre new nickname on the accused child sex trafficker, calling him “a guy who never dies.”