Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
Digest more
Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell and Justice Department
Digest more
President Donald Trump's U.S. Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation released a memo on July 7, 2025 that found no evidence for the claims of conspiracy theorists
President Trump and his allies are desperate to move past the Jeffrey Epstein controversy — but their own words and actions are having the opposite effect. Trump’s decision to sue The Wall Street Journal over an Epstein-related story,
Donald Trump’s bid to smother the uproar over accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein shows that he’s already achieved one goal his critics most feared from his second presidency.
Conservative commentator Rogan O’Handley, who goes by DC_Draino online and participated in a Trump administration photo op in February holding binders labeled “The Epstein Files,” on Monday called the memo part of a “shameful chapter” in the country’s history.
The convicted sex offender did kill himself and there is no “client list,” says Trump’s Justice Department and FBI.
Federal judges responded to a request from the attorney general to release grand jury transcripts from cases against Jeffrey Epstein and his co-conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell.
The Department of Justice said Tuesday it has reached out to Jeffrey Epstein’s former associate Ghislaine Maxwell for a meeting amid backlash over the administration’s handling of files related to Epstein.
15d
Straight Arrow News on MSNDOJ memo: Epstein died by suicide, no client list foundFBI memo confirms Epstein's suicide, rejects conspiracy theories, and says no client list or further disclosures are expected.
Maria Farmer, who once worked for Epstein, told The New York Times that she had encountered Trump in Epstein's Manhattan offices in 1995.