Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
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“The Genius Act, they named it after me,” Trump, 79, joked at the White House East Room ceremony attended by Republican congressmen, administration leaders like crypto czar David Sacks and industry figures — including the billionaire Winklevoss twins.
Congressional Democrats faced tough questions on Thursday about their sudden interest in the Epstein case under President Trump after remaining silent during the Biden administration.
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NewsNation on MSNDOJ asks federal court to unseal Epstein grand jury transcriptsEarlier this month, the Department of Justice and FBI concluded evidence did not support investigating “uncharged third parties."
Jeffrey Epstein, a financier known for his connections with prominent figures, was charged with sex trafficking minors. After his 2019 death ruled a suicide, speculation arose about whether his influential contacts were involved.
A Quinnipiac University national survey found 63% of American voters disliked the Trump administration’s approach to the probe of Epstein, a onetime acquaintance of the president in the 1990s and early 2000s — who also associated with Hollywood celebrities, business titans and British royalty.
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'Evil personified': Melinda French Gates' old interview on Epstein viral as DOJ, FBI close caseThe old video of Melinda French Gates from 2022 in which Melinda called Jeffrey Epstein 'evil personified' went viral Monday after the US administration brought the curtains down on the Epstein case. In the interview, Melinda blamed Bill Gates ...
The Epstein flight logs were made public in 2021, the same year that Michael Wolff published an astonishing account of Epstein’s final months, including the long transcript of an interview that Steve Bannon conducted with Epstein.
Trump tried to shoot down the rebellion among his allies at a Cabinet meeting July 8, declaring the Epstein saga old news, and then escalating the pressure in later comments claiming “weaklings” in his base were helping Democrats perpetuate a “hoax.”
Former Miami US Attorney Alex Acosta, who approved Epstein’s wrist-slap plea deal in 2008, fueled speculation that the pervert was a spy when he was quoted as telling the Trump transition team after the 2016 election: “I was told Epstein ‘belonged to intelligence’ and to leave it alone.”