
Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell grand jury records cover only two witnesses
A Florida federal district court separately ruled July 23 that Epstein-related records tied to federal grand jury proceedings in that state must remain private.
The New York police detective who testified in the Maxwell-related proceedings in Manhattan was serving with the FBI's Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force at the time, according to the Justice Department.
What will be new in grand jury transcripts?
The Justice Department offered a couple of indications in the latest court filing that the transcripts might not reveal much that the public doesn't already know. In addition to just having two witnesses in the transcripts, the court filing suggests that at least a significant portion of what those witnesses said may have been repeated at trial by victims of Epstein and Maxwell. In other words, it wouldn't be new information to the public.
"Many of the victims whose accounts relating to Epstein and Maxwell that were the subject of grand jury testimony testified at trial consistent with the accounts described by an FBI agent and the detective," according to the Justice Department's filing. Some of the victims also publicized their accounts in the context of civil lawsuits, the department added.
Several witnesses testified in Maxwell's month-long trial in 2021, which ended with her conviction for conspiring to entice and transport minors for illegal sex acts with Epstein and sex trafficking a minor to him. Prosecutors said Maxwell helped Epstein recruit, groom, and abuse minor girls from about 1994 to about 2004, including girls as young as 14.
Will transcripts satisfy public outrage over Epstein?
Justice Department officials asked for the transcripts to be released at the request of Trump, who said in a Truth Social post on July 17 that he made the request based on "the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein."
Department officials have called for redacting personal identifying information if courts approve of making the records public.
That caveat could further disappoint members of the public who have clamored for the government to release the names of any potential Epstein clients suspected of participating with the disgraced financier in a sex-trafficking ring. Several officials in Trump's administration have fanned the flames of those conspiracies for years, including FBI Director Kash Patel, who told right-wing media figure Glenn Beck in 2023 that the head of President Joe Biden's FBI had direct control of an Epstein "black book."
However, in a memo released July 7, the Justice Department and the FBI said a review of the government's records on Epstein failed to turn up a client list and that no further disclosures were warranted.
In the wake of that memo, even some congressional Republicans have clamored for the files' release or introduced legislation to try to force the Trump administration's hand. Republican leadership has so far blocked the legislation, and White House officials continue to resist those calls.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
14 minutes ago
- The Independent
Exclusive: Registered sex offender banned from Spirit Airlines after arrest for groping teenage seatmate
A 65-year-old registered sex offender is facing federal charges for allegedly groping a sleeping teenager on a Spirit Airlines flight. Indiana resident, John Daniel Fowler, later claimed to police that he had merely been reaching down to help right the thermos of the 17-year-old girl in the next seat after it tipped over. Fowler, who pleaded guilty to molesting his step-nephew's girlfriend and is required to register with authorities until November 2033, began the journey with a dust-up at the gate 'due to being charged $100 USD for the size of his luggage,' according to an FBI probable cause affidavit, reviewed by The Independent. 'This incident was not received well by Fowler, who respond[ed] by blurting out that he hoped the plane would crash,' the affidavit states. 'Fowler then apologized and was still allowed to board the aircraft destined to Orlando.' Fowler is now persona non grata with the carrier, a Spirit Airlines spokesperson said Monday. 'Safety is our top priority, and we have zero tolerance for the behavior as alleged,' the spokesperson told The Independent. 'The allegations are serious, and we will provide any necessary assistance to law enforcement in their investigation. Additionally, this individual is no longer welcome on any of our flights.' Fowler does not yet have an attorney listed on the court docket, and was unable to be reached for comment. On July 29, Fowler was on Spirit flight NK 1523 from Indianapolis to Orlando, assigned to an aisle seat, according to the affidavit. In the middle seat was a 17-year-old girl, identified in the affidavit as 'Victim 1.' After takeoff, the affidavit says Victim 1 asked the person seated by the window if she could take a photograph of the view. Fowler then asked Victim 1 if she could send him the photo, and gave her his phone number, the affidavit goes on. During the two-hour-plus flight, Fowler tried to make conversation with Victim 1, but she was not interested and shut him down, the affidavit says. Several times, Victim 1 was forced to physically move Fowler's hand, which kept creeping over to her seat, according to the affidavit. As the plane approached Orlando, Victim 1 was asleep underneath a blanket, and had both feet up on her seat, the affidavit continues. Once the aircraft landed, but before the doors were opened, Victim 1 woke up to find Fowler's hand under her blanket, rubbing her crotch, the affidavit states. Victim 1 screamed until she got the attention of a flight attendant who immediately brought the teen to the front of the plane. Fowler, for his part, was taken to the rear of the aircraft. Once the plane had taxied to the gate, he was questioned by Orlando police, according to the affidavit. 'During the interview, Fowler claimed that he reached down to grab Victim 1's thermos, which had fallen over… and when he came back up his arm touched her leg,' the affidavit states. Fowler denied touching the girl's private parts, and maintained he was 'not on any medication or alcohol at the time,' the affidavit says. Officers interviewed Victim 1 as well as the cabin crew at the same time. The FBI, along with a children's forensic examiner, spoke with her on August 1. Fowler was charged the same day with abusive sexual contact aboard an aircraft, which carries up to three years in federal prison; and a potential 10-year enhancement for having committed a new crime while a registered sex offender. The affidavit concludes with a recap of Fowler's November 2023 conviction, citing details from a probable cause affidavit that says he sexually assaulted a sleeping victim in her home. Fowler, who the victim told police was 'her boyfriend's step-dad's brother,' had been staying in the garage on an air mattress, the affidavit states. Her age is unclear. State court records show Fowler was given a two-year suspended sentence, with credit for time served while awaiting trial, and was sentenced to probation. After an undisclosed violation in 2024, GPS location monitoring was added to Fowler's probation terms. In July, a Texas aerospace executive flying American Airlines from Boston to Washington, D.C. was arrested after allegedly masturbating openly while pawing at the passenger seated next to him. (The suspect told police he was 'stretching his arms.') In March, a 55-year-old man was banned permanently from American after his third accusation of mid-flight sexual misconduct. A month before, a traveler sued Alaska Airlines, claiming she had been sexually assaulted by an inebriated passenger. Last year, the FBI issued an alert about sexual assault aboard commercial aircraft, a crime the bureau said was 'on the rise.'


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Trump says he will 'substantially' raise tariffs on India over Russian oil purchases
WASHINGTON, Aug 4 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday he will substantially raise tariffs on India over its purchases of Russian oil. "India is not only buying massive amounts of Russian Oil, they are then, for much of the Oil purchased, selling it on the Open Market for big profits. They don't care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian War Machine," Trump said in a post on Truth Social. "Because of this, I will be substantially raising the Tariff paid by India to the USA."


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
New book claims FBI hid evidence in Oklahoma bombing investigation
The FBI received a warning about the Oklahoma City bombing seven months before the 1995 attack took place, but failed to act on the tip-off, a new book reveals. Officials at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) were told by an informant that an attack was coming and that the Oklahoma City federal building was among the targets. The source, Carol Howe, had impeccable credentials and had infiltrated a white supremacist compound which had ties to Timothy McVeigh (pictured), who carried out the deadly truck bombing, which killed 168 people and injured around 700. But according to Blowback: The Untold Story of the FBI and the Oklahoma City Bombing, by journalist Margaret Roberts, the federal government ignored the intel, allowing McVeigh to carry out his evil plot. She says the FBI hushed up Howe's story after the bombing because it contradicted their own narrative that McVeigh was a 'lone wolf'. In fact he had significant links to white supremacist groups who could have been to blame, writes Roberts, a former news director of the true crime TV series America's Most Wanted. The bombing was, at the time, the deadliest terrorist attack on US oil and remains the third most serious by loss of life. On April 19, 1995, McVeigh parked a rented Ryder truck in front of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in downtown Oklahoma City. It was packed with fertilizer, diesel fuel and other chemicals and exploded just after 9am, carving out a massive chunk out of the building. Among the dead were 19 children. McVeigh, a former Army soldier, was arrested days later with prosecutors arguing he acted alone. But Roberts claims that this was not the case and in fact a witness could point to disturbing links to a group of white supremacists. In her book she said Howe had infiltrated a white-supremacist enclave called Elohim City, on the Oklahoma/Arkansas border, after being taken there by Dennis Mahon, a member of a group called the White Aryan Resistance. She was undercover in Elohim City for eight months leading up to the bombing and after falling out with Mahon – she claims he sexually assaulted her – the ATF offered her $120 a week to spy for them. Howe became known as CI-183 and spied on Mahon and others who were suspected of illegal firearms and explosives crimes. Known as 'The Blonde Nazi', Howe later said she filed between 50 and 150 written reports to her ATF handler, Angela Finny, in exchange for cash payments and expenses. Rather than McVeigh acting alone, the plot Howe uncovered involved what she called 'The Big Three' white supremacists in Elohim City: Mahon, who is currently in federal prison for another bombing, convicted bank robber Michael Brescia and his roommate Andreas Strassmeir, a German national who DoJ tried to interview about the bombing, but found he had returned to his homeland. German authorities refused to make him available without a guarantee he would not face the death penalty. In September or October 1994 Howe told her handlers that the three men wanted to 'blow up federal buildings' Roberts writes: 'The bomb plot was already entering its decisive phase. According to Howe, the terrorists had developed a list of three potential bombing targets including Oklahoma City's Murrah Building. Howe said the conspirators made three separate scouting missions there in 1994 and 1995 including one accompanied by Mahon and Strassmeir in December 1994'. Howe knew of McVeigh by his alias 'Tim Tuttle' and that he operated a 'satellite cell' outside of Elohim, which he had visited more than once in 1994 including at a Ku Klux Klan rally. In yet another twist, McVeigh called Elohim City asking for Strassmeir on April 17, 1995, the day the bomb truck was rented in Kansas. The FBI is said to have been given another warning about the bombing five days before it happened but again did not act, Roberts writes. The Oklahoma City Fire Department's dispatch chief received a phone call from the FBI on the Friday before the bombing, warning of a possible terrorist threat. Roberts calls Howe's testimony 'astonishing' and points to the involvement of up to 20 domestic terrorists in the bombing. But all of these lines of inquiry were shut down as McVeigh was portrayed as the sole suspect. Rather than being the 'mastermind', McVeigh could have been a 'satellite figure who followed orders as a good soldier', Roberts writes. Howe's story was due to be reported by ABC News but the TV network allegedly worked in 'cooperation' with the Justice Department and 'suppressed the biggest news story of that year'. 'The fix (was) in', Roberts writes.