Latest news with #GrandJuryTestimony


Daily Mail
6 days ago
- Politics
- Daily Mail
Judge denies Trump's demand to release Epstein grand jury testimony
A federal judge spectacularly denied a request from the Trump administration to release highly-secretive grand jury testimony from the Jeffrey Epstein case. Obama-appointed Judge Rosenberg slapped down the request from Attorney General Pam Bondi to put out transcripts of proceedings related to Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. The move comes as a blow to the administration as Trump's MAGA base is demanding all details of the investigation into the disgraced financier and convicted child [sexual] offender be made public. Trump's Justice Department had argued that making the documents public is a 'matter of public interest' and demanded preexisting protective orders be thrown out. The DOJ also filed a motion in the case against Epstein's longtime associate and friend Ghislaine Maxwell , who is currently serving her [sexual] trafficking sentence while also appealing her case to the U.S. Supreme Court . Republicans are separately subpoenaing Maxwell to appear for public testimony to provide more details on Epstein's exploits. According to an exclusive Daily Mail/JL Partners poll out Wednesday, the Epstein drama, although taking over the news cycle, is not impacting how Americans view the president. Forty-nine percent of voters now approve of Trump's job performance as president, up one point from the tracking survey conducted earlier in July. But the pressure is still mounting on the administration to deliver on its key campaign promise to put out documents related to the disgraced [sexual offender]. Trump finally gave into the pressure on Thursday night when he instructed Bondi to make more materials public. 'Based on the ridiculous amount of publicity given to Jeffrey Epstein, I have asked Attorney General Pam Bondi to produce any and all pertinent Grand Jury testimony, subject to Court approval,' he wrote on his Truth Social account. Bondi started that process on Friday by filing with the Southern District of New York to unseal the highly-secretive grand jury court documents in the case. The grand jury information is only a part of the evidence that makes up the so-called Epstein files. Trump's vow to unseal more information came after the Wall Street Journal published a 50th birthday card it said he allegedly sent to Epstein in 2003. The president denies he wrote the letter and threatened to sue the publication. The direction to unseal files came the same day that White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed that Trump had no interest in appointing a special counsel to review the investigation. In Friday's filing there are no requests to unseal the search warrants, which are also at the center of the case, or any other documents that might yield more substantive details of the investigation. DOJ insiders tell the Daily Mail they believe search warrants are a key to the case and could provide insight into why more evidence was not initially seized and why some evidence Americans are looking for may no longer exist. Trump's order to Bondi on Thursday suggests that his attorney general was not already authorized to ask the court to unseal the grand jury materials. If done from the jump, the process could have been in motion months ago rather than just starting. What it really means is that Americans may have to wait months or even years to get more answers – if they get them at all. The unsealing of grand jury testimony presents a lot of obstacles and is perhaps one of the more difficult pieces of information to unseal in a case considering stringent secrecy rules that many courts are hesitant to lift. The WSJ reported on Thursday that Trump's alleged birthday card to Epstein in 2003 featured a hand-drawn outline of a naked woman along with a signature 'Donald.' The typewritten message read: 'Happy Birthday - and may every day be another wonderful secret.' Trump is threatening a lawsuit against the newspaper and its owner Rupert Murdoch. 'The Wall Street Journal printed a fake letter, supposedly to Epstein. These are not my words, not the way I talk,' Trump posted to Truth Social. 'Also, I don't draw pictures.' Trump said he told Murdoch the letter was a 'scam,' but that he printed the story anyway. 'I'm going to sue his [expletive] off,' the president wrote. It appears Trump is now fed up with the continued narrative around Epstein and the untiring demand – even from his base – for more to be released. Earlier this month, the president repeatedly pleaded with his supporters to stop focusing on what he now calls the 'Jeffrey Epstein hoax.' He posted on Truth Social multiple times claiming the claims of a 'client list' and other conspiracies surrounding Epstein were made up by Democrats to stoke division in MAGA world.


CNN
19-07-2025
- Politics
- CNN
DOJ Asks Court To Release Grand Jury Testimony In Epstein Case - Laura Coates Live - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
DOJ Asks Court To Release Grand Jury Testimony In Epstein Case Laura Coates Live 45 mins The Trump administration's chaotic handling of the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files continued Friday as the Justice Department asked a federal judge to make public years-old grand jury testimony made behind closed doors against the convicted sex offender. In its filing, the department justified releasing the heretofore secret evidence as 'a matter of public interest.'


New York Times
18-07-2025
- Politics
- New York Times
Friday Briefing: Trump's Order on Epstein Records
Trump authorized the release of some Epstein records President Trump said yesterday on social media that he was authorizing the release of 'any and all Grand Jury Testimony, subject to Court approval,' in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Trump cited 'the ridiculous amount of publicity' surrounding the case. Here's the latest. Trump's move is unlikely to satisfy critics within his own MAGA movement, who were outraged this week when his administration reversed course on promises to release more details about the federal investigation into the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender, who died in 2019. They want the release of all Justice Department files on Epstein, not just grand jury testimony. Shortly before Trump's announcement, House Republicans — under pressure from Democrats and their own angry constituents — broke with Trump and agreed to set up a potential vote calling on the Justice Department to release material from its Epstein investigation. The measure, a nonbinding resolution, has not been scheduled for a vote and it's unclear if it could muster enough support to pass. The issue was holding up the House's final passage of legislation to claw back $9 billion in congressionally approved spending. Voting was still in progress when this briefing was sent. Context: Epstein died by suicide in prison while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. He was connected to many rich and powerful people, and many on both the right and the left suspect that some were involved in his criminal activity. Trump was friendly with Epstein for at least 15 years. Here's what we know. A deeper look: Trump calls it the 'Jeffrey Epstein Hoax.' Here's what his supporters say. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.