
Trump defends Bondi amid backlash over Epstein files
Trump said "nobody cares about" Epstein, and that more time or energy must not be wasted on his case, as he tried to unite his base of supporters in a nearly 400-word post on Truth Social.
"What's going on with my "boys" and, in some cases, "gals?" They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening," Trump said.
In a joint memo released on Monday, the FBI and Justice Department said there was no evidence to support a number of long-held conspiracy theories about Epstein's death in federal custody in 2019 and his alleged clientele.
Conservative influencers from Laura Loomer to Elon Musk have criticized Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel for their findings, which came months after Bondi pledged to reveal major revelations about Epstein, including "a lot of names" and "a lot of flight logs."
U.S. media, including Fox News and NBC News, have reported that FBI deputy director Dan Bongino has clashed with Bondi over the issue and is considering stepping down.
Patel and Bongino, a former conservative podcaster, both previously made statements before working at the FBI about a so-called client list and often suggested that the government was hiding information about Epstein from the American public.
Monday's memo on Epstein concluded that after reviewing more than 300 gigabytes of data, there was "no incriminating client list" nor was there any evidence that Epstein may have blackmailed prominent people.
The memo also confirmed prior findings by the FBI which concluded that Epstein died by suicide in his jail cell while awaiting trial, and not as a result of a criminal act such as murder.
Epstein's death while imprisoned in New York's Metropolitan Correctional Center has ignited controversy for years.
Expectations for key revelations in his case grew when, in February, Fox News asked Bondi whether the Justice Department would be releasing Epstein's client list, and she said, "It's sitting on my desk right now to review."
On Tuesday at the White House, Bondi walked that comment back, telling reporters that she was referring to the entire Epstein "file" along with other files pertaining to the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. "That's what I meant by that," she said.
(Reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa, Editing by Franklin Paul)

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


The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Too early to say if US tariffs will impact JS-SEZ, says Johor exco man
JOHOR BARU: Johor is watching the negotiations between Putrajaya and Washington closely before the 25% reciprocal tariffs imposed by the United States on Malaysia take effect on Aug 1. State investment, trade, consumer affairs and human resources committee chairman Lee Ting Han said it was too early to say if the new tariff rate would have an impact on the Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone (JS-SEZ). 'Initially, the Federal Government projected that Malaysia would get a good deal, but the United States decided to increase the tariff. 'So now, we have been told that the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry is negotiating with its American counterparts,' he added. Lee, who is also the Paloh assemblyman, was speaking on the sidelines of the Associated Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry of Malaysia's (ACCCIM) 79th annual general meeting at a hotel here on Sunday (July 13). He added that the state government hoped the talks between Malaysia and the United States would yield some good news. 'Johor is among the biggest exporters of petrochemicals, semiconductors, electrical and electronic goods, and furniture to the world, including to the United States, but we are still uncertain about the impact of the new tariff rate,' he said. On Monday (July 7), the United States announced it would impose a higher 25% tariff on all Malaysian products exported to the United States effective Aug 1, an increase from the 24% announced in April. International Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Zafrul Abdul Aziz said Malaysia is optimistic that further negotiations will bring a positive outcome. He said the Aug 1 deadline provides Malaysia several weeks to negotiate for a 'win-win' trade deal for both countries. 'Of course, we will continue the engagement. 'If we are not optimistic, why should we continue the engagement? 'The important thing is that the US still wants to negotiate,' he added.


The Sun
4 hours ago
- The Sun
Farm worker dies after US immigration raid in California cannabis farm
CAMARILLO: A farm worker has died following injuries sustained during a US immigration raid at a legal cannabis farm in California, his family confirmed. The incident occurred during a crackdown by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, part of President Donald Trump's intensified anti-immigration measures. Raids on agricultural sites in Ventura County, about 90 kilometers from Los Angeles, led to the arrest of 200 undocumented migrants. The worker's family set up a GoFundMe page to support relatives in Mexico, later updating it to announce his death. 'My uncle Jaime was just a hard-working, innocent farmer,' the post read. 'He was chased by ICE agents, and we were told he fell 9 meters.' The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stated the worker was never in custody. 'Although he was not being pursued by law enforcement, this individual climbed up to the roof of a greenhouse and fell,' said DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin. Authorities called for emergency medical assistance, but the worker succumbed to what the family described as 'catastrophic' injuries. The raids targeted marijuana-growing sites in Carpinteria and Camarillo, with DHS reporting the rescue of 10 children from potential exploitation. Glass House Brands, the farm owner, denied violating hiring laws or employing minors. Protests erupted during the operation, with over 500 demonstrators attempting to disrupt the raid. Tear gas was deployed after some protesters threw projectiles at law enforcement vehicles. Four US citizens face charges for assaulting officers, while a $50,000 reward is offered for the arrest of a suspect who allegedly fired at police. President Trump condemned the protesters on Truth Social, calling them 'slimeballs' and authorizing ICE to use 'whatever means necessary' to stop assaults on officers. His administration has clashed with California's Democratic leadership over immigration enforcement, including the deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles last month. Governor Gavin Newsom argued the troops were unnecessary, but legal challenges to remove them have failed. Meanwhile, workers at the Camarillo farm waited for answers. 'We've been here since six this morning asking questions, but they're not giving us any information,' said Saul Munoz, whose son was detained. 'The truth is the American dream is no longer really the American dream.' - AFP


The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Why they are flattening Gaza
IN Washington, Pakistan and Israel's Nobel Peace Prize nominee, joined by Israel's MIT-educated prime minister, were recently toasting their shared success. While some differences exist, the duo considers its achievement epoch-making: the Arabs have been reduced to a defeated and demoralised lot, humbly offering as tithe a three trillion-dollar investment in America – with a personal jetliner as the topping. While Israel dropped bombs from the sky over Arab lands, regular flights of Gulf carriers to and from Tel Aviv continued undisturbed. But the victories go further: Iran was once the outlier, the last to challenge United States-Israeli domination of the entire Middle East. After 12 days of war its defiance is now merely token. Months earlier its allies in Lebanon and Yemen had been decimated. Mass starvation in Gaza – now just piles of rubble – has eviscerated Hamas. Meanwhile, Israeli soldiers with automatic weapons enjoy daily target practice with live ammunition on Palestinian children as they chase food trucks. Pronouncing moral judgement on these two men may offer relief to some but to what end? Let's recall that even the International Criminal Court was openly derided in Washington as a 'kangaroo court' when it ordered Netanyahu's arrest. Blaming individual leaders alone misses the point. No matter how powerful, they invariably reflect what their base wants. Consider that in 2024, as Netanyahu addressed the United States Congress amidst his hospital bombing campaign, American lawmakers – mostly Republicans but also many Democrats – repeatedly gave him standing ovations. We surely need to dig deeper lest we miss the systemic forces shaping the mindset of both leaders as well as Western publics. To see why Israel wants to eliminate as many Palestinians as possible is easy. Over its entire history it has deliberately cultivated a Holocaust-driven us-or-them mentality. While Hamas' October 7 attack on Israeli civilians was morally abhorrent, Israel has systematically sought to blame all violence on the people it has conquered. But what about America? What beef does America have with Palestinians living half a world away? The ruins of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip. — AFP In the past, American presidents pursued their political objectives in the Middle East through 'gentler' covert means like CIA-led coups and targeted assassinations but never through overt genocide captured on camera. The shift, I will argue below, owes to the rapid rise of Social Darwinism and evangelists of the Bible Belt. Social Darwinism became a popular belief in 19th-century America soon after Darwin discovered the laws of biological selection. Darwin – a true scientist – forcefully rejected this 'Darwinism' as extreme misapplication and distortion of his work. Nevertheless, the capitalist robber barons of his time found this piece of science very useful. British philosopher Herbert Spencer first coined the phrase 'survival of the fittest' and advocated that this is the way things ought to be, not just how nature functioned. Society advances, he wrote, when 'its fittest members are allowed to assert their fitness with the least hindrance.' The unfit should 'not be prevented from dying out'. America's cowboy culture readily absorbed Spencer and, in time, Donald Trump inherited this mindset from his father, a property dealer. His political career, culminating in his presidency, was launched by his popular book, Think Big and Kick A**: In Business and in Life . This crude title bespeaks its crude content: being self-serving and brazen brings success, and ultimately, success is all that matters, regardless of how it's achieved. Elon Musk – the richest man in the world and Trump's ex-sidekick – couldn't agree more. 'The fundamental weakness of Western civilisation is empathy', he declared, adding that 'woke' liberals have weaponised empathy and are 'exploiting a bug in Western civilisation.' Musk trashes social insurance such as Social Security, which he calls a 'Ponzi scheme.' His newly launched political party will be still kinder to America's ultra-rich and yet harsher on ordinary people. As for starving Palestinians: the fewer the better. What do they produce, he asked rhetorically. While heartlessness might explain why the US has stopped trying to feed the world's hungry, it fails to explain why America helped Israel flatten Gaza. For that, we must glance at Trump's political base. In 2024, Trump won over roughly 80% of white conservative, evangelical Christian voters. (Incidentally, most conservative Pakistani-Americans also voted for Trump.) During my professional visits to the US over the decades, I've often found myself watching white televangelists hawk their beliefs and marvelled at their well-honed delivery skills. Their core message: the Bible commands you to give your absolute support for Israel. Then, without batting an eyelid, they equate the Promised Land of Moses's time with today's nation-state of Israel. One such preacher – later disgraced because of his weakness for women – I watched particularly. Jimmy Swaggart, who died last week, was a Christian Zionist who made his living off the Bible. 'Israel is God's prophetic time clock,' that heralds Armageddon and Jesus's return to Earth, he sermonised. His son, Donnie Swaggart, carries on his mission today: 'We must stand for Israel, for Jerusalem is the chosen city of God, where Jesus Christ, the King of Kings, will one day reign forever.' That Trump ordered the US embassy to be shifted from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in his first presidency was surely not accidental. No logical exercise can ever disprove what the Swaggarts and their ilk preach. Reason can never defeat faith, particularly when it stands behind a holy book. But what about Social Darwinism? Is that unassailable too? Here one can be more hopeful. Its nonsensical pseudo-scientific claims – virtuous people beget virtuous children being one – are readily disproven. But more importantly, as Darwin himself insisted, cooperation within the human species is fundamental for societal well-being. Cooperation, in turn, demands empathy. Without empathy we'd be living in a dystopic Muskian jungle populated by selfish individuals pursuing selfish needs. To prevent more Gazas, people in every country must boldly confront their ingrained beliefs, repudiate pure selfishness, and internalise the profound truth that humanity is one. Else the scum shall continue rising to the top, eventually becoming that country's political leaders. — Dawn/ANN Pervez Hoodbhoy is an Islamabad-based physicist and writer.