Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell and department of justice
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In response to a public clamor for more information about Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking case, the Trump administration has asked federal courts to unseal grand jury transcripts.While seeking the files’ release allows President Donald Trump to claim that he has nothing to hide about the late,
The government will have to meet a high legal bar for the court to agree that any of the grand jury documents should be released—and those materials could still be disappointing.
Speaking on a podcast, Allison Gill and Kel McClanahan outline a legal case aimed at ensuring more documentation is released.
Jeffrey Epstein's brother laughs at 'stupid' FBI memo defending controversial suicide ruling: report
Jeffrey Epstein's brother disputes official suicide ruling, criticizing the FBI's memo that concluded no further evidence would be released despite his demands
On Thursday, Mullin and Democratic Senator Ruben Gallego each put forth a resolution on the Epstein files that they claimed was transparent. While Gallego called for the DOJ to release all files in full without caveat, Mullin called on the department to release “all credible information” related specifically to Epstein’s sealed legal proceedings.
The records are at the center of President Trump’s effort to manage fallout from the Epstein case. But unsealing them is complex and requires a judge to sign off.
Attorney General Pam Bondi said she would seek the release of the Epstein grand jury transcripts today, at Donald Trump's request. What will they show?
A federal judge is seeking more information before he decides on the Trump administration’s request to release Epstein grand jury testimony. While Judge Richard Berman intends to rule quickly, he indicated in a Tuesday order that the government needs to supply more legal arguments and clarification on what transcripts should be unsealed before he can proceed.
The speaker is sending members of the House home early for a month-long break from Washington amid calls for a vote on the Epstein matter.
Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell sits at the defense table as juror number 50 answers questions from Judge Alison Nathan about his answers on the juror questionaire in a courtroom sketch in New York City,