logo
Epstein Files Fallout: Kash Patel considers resignation; Pam Bondi vs Dan Bongino - the story so far

Epstein Files Fallout: Kash Patel considers resignation; Pam Bondi vs Dan Bongino - the story so far

Time of India17 hours ago
The Trump administration is facing its most volatile internal crisis yet, as FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino edges closer to resignation over Attorney General Pam Bondi's mishandling of the long-anticipated Epstein files.
The fallout, driven by Bondi's broken promises and growing public outrage, has FBI Director Kash Patel reportedly prepared to follow Bongino out the door—setting the stage for a possible leadership implosion at the heart of American law enforcement.
This internal war—once quietly brewing—is now on full display, with recriminations flying, alliances shifting, and MAGA loyalists turning on their own.
The Flashpoint: DOJ Memo Torches 'Client List' Hopes
On July 7, the Department of Justice issued a memo that decisively undercut the narrative Bondi had been peddling for months.
The two-page document concluded there was no evidence of a 'client list,' no credible signs of blackmail, and reaffirmed the long-standing official position that Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide in a federal jail cell in 2019.
The memo, signed off by both DOJ and FBI leadership, included surveillance footage and investigative summaries that contradicted Bondi's earlier statements. For months, she had claimed the FBI was in possession of tens of thousands of hours of disturbing video footage, and had repeatedly promised bombshell disclosures.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Upto 15% Discount for Salaried Individuals
ICICI Pru Life Insurance Plan
Get Quote
Undo
Those promises now appear to have been hollow.
Conservative influencers, who had banked on explosive revelations implicating elites, were incensed. Bondi's office had built expectations with Phase 1 of the 'Epstein Files' back in February—a series of binders handed out to right-wing media figures that mostly repackaged previously leaked information. With the July memo's flat conclusions, fury erupted.
Bongino vs Bondi: The Internal Explosion
The conflict between Bongino and Bondi came to a head on July 9 during a closed-door White House meeting.
Bondi accused Bongino of leaking frustrations to the press, an allegation he denied. Witnesses described the exchange as heated and personal, with Bongino storming out of the room.
Two days later, Bongino took a personal day and has not returned. Multiple administration sources now say his resignation is imminent. One source described him as 'done,' and unwilling to work another day under Bondi's leadership. Bongino, a former Secret Service agent and a fixture in conservative media, had reluctantly endorsed the DOJ memo's suicide conclusion, only to be caught in the backlash from MAGA influencers who accused him of selling out.
Kash Patel: Torn Between Loyalty and Fallout
FBI Director Kash Patel is also said to be considering resignation. Once a key proponent of theories questioning Epstein's death, Patel has since aligned with the suicide explanation in his official capacity. However, insiders say he is privately furious at Bondi for damaging the Bureau's credibility and igniting a crisis within the administration.
Patel's calculus is reportedly tied to Bongino's fate. If his deputy resigns, Patel may follow, seeing little institutional value in continuing under Bondi's divisive leadership.
One aide close to the director said, 'He doesn't want to be left holding the bag. If Bongino goes, Kash walks too.'
MAGA Mutiny: The Base Turns on Bondi
Bondi, once lionised by MAGA world as a crusading truth-teller, now finds herself isolated. Online, influencers and activists who once supported her are accusing her of deceit. Hashtags attacking her flooded conservative corners of social media in the days following the memo's release. Even voices that typically defend the Trump administration have begun to call for her resignation.
What makes the backlash particularly potent is that Bondi had personally staked her reputation on the idea that the Epstein files contained smoking guns. Now that official documentation has concluded otherwise, she has lost the confidence of both the public and senior officials inside the administration.
Trump's Calculated Distance
Donald Trump has so far refused to intervene. During a cabinet meeting on July 8, he reportedly urged his team to 'move on' from the Epstein issue, calling it a distraction from his legislative agenda.
While the president continues to publicly back Bondi, insiders say he's well aware of her declining utility. Trump's political instincts have always been sharper than his personal loyalties—and Bondi may soon find herself on the wrong side of that calculation.
Timeline of the Fallout
February 2025: Bondi distributes 'Epstein Files: Phase 1' to influencers—mostly rehashed content
May 2025: Bongino and Patel publicly align with suicide ruling
July 7, 2025: DOJ memo affirms suicide, no client list, no charges pending
July 9, 2025: Bondi and Bongino clash during White House meeting
July 11, 2025: Bongino takes leave; resignation imminent
July 12, 2025: Patel signals he may leave if Bongino quits
The Big Picture
This isn't just about Epstein. It's about trust, credibility, and the fault lines within the Trump-era security state. Bondi's promise of transparency has backfired, alienating the very audience it was meant to appease. Bongino's looming exit and Patel's wavering loyalty signal a broader collapse of cohesion at the top. With two of the administration's most prominent law enforcement figures ready to walk and the base in open revolt, Pam Bondi's position may no longer be tenable.
And while the Epstein case may be officially closed, the political aftershocks are far from over.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chhangur Baba: Foreign funds used for propagating Islam, not conversions
Chhangur Baba: Foreign funds used for propagating Islam, not conversions

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Chhangur Baba: Foreign funds used for propagating Islam, not conversions

Lucknow: Jamaluddin, alias Chhangur Baba of UP's Balrampur, the alleged mastermind of illegal mass religious conversions, has admitted to receiving crores of rupees from abroad, but claimed the funds were intended for religious propagation and spiritual events, not proselytisation. He also admitted to organising foreign tours using these funds. However, ATS officials suspect that these religious programmes were merely a facade for conversion activities. Chhangur and his associate Neetu alias Nasreen, were taken to the Balrampur mansion on Saturday, where ATS identified rooms allegedly used for "conversion counselling" sessions. Neetu's role in luring vulnerable women and families is also under scrutiny. A probe into his Balrampur mansion revealed the presence of a controversial text titled Shijr-e-Tayyaba, which was allegedly used to brainwash Hindu women into religious conversion. The book, as per police, was self-published by Chhangur and served as a strategic tool in his indoctrination network. The agency is now mapping the financial trail across multiple bank accounts and probing potential foreign links, including travel facilitated through Nepal-issued passports. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like American Investor Warren Buffett Recommends: 5 Books For Turning Your Life Around Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo ATS has uncovered that four Nepal-issued passports, allegedly linked to the Chhangur gang, were used for travel to Dubai, indicating a broader international conversion-funding racket. Chhangur admitted that several large donations were routed through various bank accounts under the guise of religious events, raising suspicions that these events masked covert conversion operations, an ATS source said. Investigators believe that Chhangur orchestrated an emotional and religious takeover of a family from Rohara, Balrampur. He allegedly convinced the couple — Naveen and Neetu — to convert to Islam, promising them a child through his "spiritual blessings". An ATS source claimed that Chhangur attempted to exploit the Rohara family's trust in order to gain control over crores worth of property. Their daughter, renamed Sabiha post-conversion, is now believed to have been targeted for a future nikah with Chhangur's grandson, allegedly to secure her inheritance, police claimed. Enforcement Directorate (ED) has been provided with a copy of the FIR and is preparing to initiate demolition and attachment proceedings against illegal properties linked to him. Mohammad Ahmad Khan, Chhangur's key financial operator, allegedly managed transactions after latter's accounts were frozen and is currently under ATS probe. All involved to face action: UP DGP Anyone found to be financially or physically involved in Chhangur's illegal conversion network will face strict legal action, UP DGP Rajeev Krishna said Saturday. "Multiple angles are being examined, including demographic and Islamic conversion-related dimensions," he said, adding that if needed, assistance from central or other investigative agencies will be sought to uncover the full extent of the case. "To get to the bottom of this conspiracy, we are open to taking help from any agency necessary," he said.

Rising South: An order rebalanced
Rising South: An order rebalanced

Deccan Herald

timean hour ago

  • Deccan Herald

Rising South: An order rebalanced

US President Donald Trump has, in his inimitable style, once again taken to social media to issue a threat to the BRICS countries huddled together to devise strategies against the US tariff attacks. 'Any country aligning with the anti-American policies of BRICS will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10 per cent tariff,' he said, hours after the BRICS finance ministers issued a statement that criticised the tariffs, calling them a threat to the global virtually to the BRICS gathering, Russian President Putin reiterated his suggestion of greater financial independence from the US dollar in international trade settlements. Trump is understandably annoyed at the revival of this narrative of criticising Trump's use of tariffs as a coercive policy to force countries to enter bilateral trade deals that favour the US, the BRICS summit proposed a series of reforms in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and its currency valuation methods. According to the BRICS economic advocacy group, in the current economic uncertainty, the IMF needs to embrace urgent reforms in the quota system to increase the representation and voting power of developing countries, as the present system promotes dominance of advanced economies. The BRICS nations are also calling for an end to the 'gentlemen's agreement' which has historically favoured European countries in the IMF's leadership financial institutions, especially the two Bretton Woods institutions – the IMF and the World Bank (WB) – did play a significant role in the international financial architecture for some years. But they could not prevent the financial crisis nor bail the developed economies out of the crisis, much of which was their own creation. It has also been noted that their working and decision-making process continued to be greatly influenced by the developed 'North' and less relevant to the developing or underdeveloped 'South'. The last two or three decades have seen the global growth engine shift from the North to the South, which now houses three of the world's largest economies. Meanwhile, groupings such as BIMSTEC, BRICS, ASEAN, and SCO have added tremendous muscle to the emerging South-South countries add up to represent about 49% of the world's population, 39% of the global GDP, and 23% of international trade. In a changing geopolitical and geo-economic setting, when the US under Trump's administration is looking to withdraw from global institutions and looking more inwards in its quest for Making America Great Again (MAGA), the post-World War II economic institutions cannot expect to be relevant and succeed in their original objectives by remaining within a seven decades-old organisational structure. They must either reinvent themselves or face the possibility of paling into BRICS financial institutions and efforts under the South-South Cooperation (SSC) are assured signs of a collective leadership that is aligned with a multilateral world order – these are realities of the present era. The rise of the South, the emerging economies, and India's leadership role in SSC promise an alternative to archaic perceptions that are far removed from ground realities, and to the North and its tired leadership. Blocking the progress of BRICS will serve no real purpose for America or the attempts to create roadblocks for BRICS are born out of apprehensions of a challenge to the America-led world order, which is creaking under its own weight of contradictions. The independent non-dollar trade settlement system, which the BRICS is considering, may not be a reality soon, but it is born out of necessity, from the dollar's failure to meet the challenges and needs of the present era. The bilateral and multilateral economic, security, and strategic arrangements under the BRICS agenda need not necessarily hurt the interests of the US or any other grouping unless there is an established clash of interests, which in a highly globalised world would be detrimental for everyone play an important role in understanding the geopolitical and geo-economic dynamics of any given time. The decisions, economic or otherwise, the interpretations of meetings and events, and policy formulations made on flawed perceptions will lead to detrimental results. America and the rest of the Western world have to learn from past errors of judgement and look at the emerging institutions of the South, such as BRICS, from a new perspective. The shift is real – looking away cannot alter that reality.

59 Palestinians in Gaza are killed by Israeli airstrikes or shot dead while seeking aid
59 Palestinians in Gaza are killed by Israeli airstrikes or shot dead while seeking aid

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

59 Palestinians in Gaza are killed by Israeli airstrikes or shot dead while seeking aid

DEIR AL-BALAH: At least 31 Palestinians were fatally shot on their way to an aid distribution site in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, while Israeli airstrikes killed at least 28 Palestinians including four children, Palestinian hospital officials and witnesses said. The deaths came after no signs of a breakthrough in ceasefire talks following two days of meetings between U.S. President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump had said he was closing in on an agreement between Israel and Hamas that would potentially wind down the war. The 31 shot dead were on their way to a distribution site run by the Israeli-backed American organization Gaza Humanitarian Foundation near Rafah in southern Gaza, hospital officials and witnesses said. The Red Cross said its field hospital saw its largest influx of dead in more than a year of operation after the shootings, and that the overwhelming majority of the more than 100 people hurt had gunshot wounds. The airstrikes in central Gaza's Deir al-Balah killed 13 including the four children, officials at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said. Fifteen others were killed in Khan Younis in the south, according to Nasser Hospital. Israel's military did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Intense airstrikes continued Saturday evening in the area of Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store