Epstein
House Oversight Committee votes to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi over Epstein files
Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva Faktatarkistettu
The Republican-led House Oversight Committee approved a subpoena for Attorney General Pam Bondi in a 24-19 vote, after five Republicans joined Democrats to back a motion offered by Rep. Nancy Mace. The panel is seeking Bondi’s testimony on the Justice Department’s handling of records tied to Jeffrey Epstein and on problems that emerged during the government’s staged release of those materials.
A federal judge in Florida dismissed President Trump's $10 billion defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch over a story linking him to Jeffrey Epstein. U.S. District Judge Darrin P. Gayles ruled that Trump failed to adequately allege actual malice, but allowed an amended complaint. The decision came Monday following a July lawsuit prompted by the newspaper's report on a 2003 letter.
Raportoinut AI
More than 40 Epstein survivors and models have signed letters calling for probes into the modeling industry's alleged role in facilitating Jeffrey Epstein's abuse. The letters, addressed to officials including New York Attorney General Letitia James, highlight systemic vulnerabilities that enabled exploitation. Model Alliance, which organized the effort, seeks accountability beyond individual perpetrators.
Jeffrey Epsteinille työskennellyt ruotsalaismies kiistää kaiken rikollisen toiminnan, kun hänen nimensä ilmestyi Epstein-dokumenteissa. Hän väittää yhteistyön olleen ammattimaista eikä hänellä ole mitään piilotettavaa. Yhteistyö kesti kymmenen vuotta vuoteen 2019 asti.
Raportoinut AI
Ghislaine Maxwell, serving a 20-year sentence for her role in Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking scheme, invoked her Fifth Amendment rights during a virtual deposition before the House Oversight Committee on Monday. Her lawyer stated she would testify fully about Epstein's crimes only if President Donald Trump grants her clemency, adding that she could explain the innocence of both Trump and former President Bill Clinton. The committee expressed disappointment but aims to uncover more about Epstein's associates and victims.
The House Oversight Committee has voted to recommend holding former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in contempt of Congress for defying subpoenas related to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Republicans argue the Clintons obstructed the probe, while Democrats call it partisan politics. The matter now heads to the full House for approval.
Raportoinut AI
Representative Ro Khanna, a Democrat from California, has criticized the Justice Department for missing a deadline to release unclassified files related to Jeffrey Epstein. In an NPR interview, he emphasized the need for transparency regarding withheld documents that could implicate powerful figures. Khanna and his Republican co-author are pushing Congress to intervene.
Bill Clinton denies Epstein 'likes them young' claim, defends Trump in compelled House deposition
25. helmikuuta 2026 16.50Oversight Democrats press DOJ over Epstein-file gaps tied to allegations involving Trump
24. helmikuuta 2026 10.42House Democrats to investigate DOJ handling of missing Epstein-file pages that reference allegations involving Trump
20. helmikuuta 2026 20.19Former Prince Andrew arrested in Epstein investigation
19. helmikuuta 2026 05.24Former prince Andrew arrested over Epstein emails
3. helmikuuta 2026 20.43Ruotsin huippustudenteja mainittu Epstein-dokumenteissa
2. helmikuuta 2026 13.32House oversight chair rejects Clintons' effort to avoid contempt vote
1. helmikuuta 2026 05.52New Epstein files expose Prince Andrew's interactions
31. tammikuuta 2026 17.33Ruotsalaismies värväsi nuoria naisia Epsteinille
30. tammikuuta 2026 11.08DOJ releases final tranche of Epstein files