grand jury, Jeffrey Epstein and DOJ
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Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein
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The Justice Department said unsealing grand jury transcripts related to Epstein's case is necessary given "longstanding and legitimate" public interest in the case.
"If the president wants to know what they need to do in order to put an end to this endless, endless conversation about Jeffrey Epstein — release the file." Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen joined Antonia Hylton on The Beat and reacts to The Wall Street Journal's new report that the DOJ notified Trump in May that his name appeared in the Epstein files.
Columbia has agreed to pay over $200 million in a federal settlement. And, President Trump's new AI policies set requirements for companies wanting to do business with the federal government.
The Federal Law Enforcement Subcommittee tonight approved a motion by Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., to subpoena the Justice Department to release the Epstein files. The subcommittee also approved motion by Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., to direct the chairman to subpoena the people listed previously.
The DOJ had been asking for the very first federal grand jury transcripts from the Epstein investigation, which opened in 2005. They were held in Florida, where the investigation
We don’t yet know the full story of the Trump administration’s sudden reluctance to release the Jeffrey Epstein files. Its reversal appears to have coincided with the president being told his name appeared in the files,