Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Bondi
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The fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein files is further roiling a Justice Department and FBI that have struggled to appease the demands of far-right conservative personalities.
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
Multiple sources have detailed clashes between Attorney General Pam Bondi and the FBI’s number two, Dan Bongino, who is reportedly considering leaving his post over Bondi’s handling of the Epstein files.
Opinion
15hon MSNOpinion
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.
The Justice Department's memo on Jeffrey Epstein is causing a bitter rift among some of the most prominent figures in Donald Trump's administration.
Historian Richard Hofstadter was a pioneer observer of what he called “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” which he described in a 1964 Harper’s Magazine analysis of the use of loose facts and pseudo-facts to build an alternative reality for political ends.
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.
We're not even six months into Trump's second term, and we're already seeing some major cracks in his MAGA base on issues like foreign wars and possible amnesty. The biggest example yet: FBI deputy director Dan Bongino is considering leaving his post after a heated confrontation with Pam Bondi over the so-called "Epstein files.