jeffrey epstein, House and Trump
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Trump, Epstein and Wall Street Journal
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Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Pam Bondi
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President Donald Trump's name was mentioned nine times across the hundreds of pages in the “phase one" release of the Epstein files.
President Donald Trump on Thursday directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to release "any and all" grand jury testimony related to the disgraced, deceased financier.
The big question on the tips of many political watchers’ tongues right now is whether the Trump administration’s botched handling of the Epstein files will do what virtually nothing has yet: turn President Donald Trump’s devoted base against him.
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President Trump said yesterday on social media that he was authorizing the release of “any and all Grand Jury Testimony, subject to Court approval,” in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Trump cited “the ridiculous amount of publicity” surrounding the case. Here’s the latest.
The president threatened to sue the newspaper and News Corp for publishing an article about a letter bearing his name that was included in a 2003 birthday album for Jeffrey Epstein.
After a Wall Street Journal report on the relationship between President Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein, the president is now asking his attorney general to release any “pertinent” grand jury testimony from the case.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump will not recommend a special counsel in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, a White House spokeswoman said Thursday, turning aside calls for further action in an inquiry that has roiled the Justice Department and angered supporters who had been expecting a treasure trove of documents from the case.
Calls for transparency on Epstein came from several Republicans on Capitol Hill on Wednesday. And Trump's own former vice president, Mike Pence, called for the administration to "release all of the files" regarding the Epstein investigation.