Jeffrey Epstein, Trump
Digest more
The government reopened, more files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were released, and the White House is shifting some attention to affordability.
Trump said on social media he was seeking investigations into Bill Clinton and Larry Summers, as well as JP Morgan and other major banks.
1hon MSN
At Trump’s urging, Bondi says US will investigate Epstein’s ties to Clinton and other political foes
Acceding to President Donald Trump’s demands, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi says she has ordered a top federal prosecutor to investigate sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s ties to Trump political foes,
Epstein vote: On top of the newly released emails, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., swore in Rep. Adelita Grijalva, D-Ariz., whom he had refused to seat when the House was out of town during the shutdown after her Sept. 23 special election victory.
US President Donald Trump is back in the eye of the storm after he reinstated the controversial 3.6-metre statue in which the president and Jeffrey Epstein, a deceased sex offender
Regtechtimes on MSN
Kathy Ruemmler’s secret Epstein ties explode into scandal—Goldman Sachs lawyer at center of Washington firestorm
Goldman Sachs is publicly supporting its top lawyer, Kathy Ruemmler, after a congressional committee released old emails showing her friendly exchanges with Jeffrey Epstein. These messages were written years before she joined the company in 2020,
Thousands of documents released by the House Oversight Committee offer a new glimpse into what Jeffery Epstein’s relationships with business executives, reporters, academics and political players looked like over a decade.
In an email Epstein sent to his co-conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein referred to Trump as a “dog that hasn’t barked” and that Trump “spent hours” at Epstein’s home with one of his sex trafficking victims. In another email, Epstein alleged that Trump was aware of his misconduct with underage girls.
A House push to release files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein cleared a significant hurdle Nov. 12, as Democrats and a handful of Republicans reached 218 signatures to force a floor vote on a bill to release the files within 30 days.
Emails released by congressional Democrats show the late accused sex trafficker said he lost a bet to then-citizen Donald Trump.
The e-mails—unverified, typo-ridden assertions from a man who is not around to testify about them—do not constitute specific proof of anything, it should be underscored, just fodder for endless new rounds of questions now that politicians in Trump’s own party have chosen to release them. Who knows what else is lurking in there?