Donald Trump, Epstein and Wall Street Journal
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A sudden resurgence of interest in the late convicted sex offender, and unanswered questions about his crimes, has been measurable this month in book sales, Netflix streams and YouTube searches.
Certainly not Ron Wyden. But he’s one of many reasons, in addition to the aforementioned birthday card, why this is not going away. A second is that the Department of Justice just happens to have fired one of the prosecutors who worked on Epstein’s case.
The Justice Department said unsealing grand jury transcripts related to Epstein's case is necessary given "longstanding and legitimate" public interest in the case.
CNN Chief Data Analyst Harry Enten looks at public sentiment over the Jeffrey Epstein case and how the government is handling it.
Donald Trump's first term chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, said that he believes the president is mentioned in the Jeffery Epstein files. Follow Newsweek's live blog.
A Justice Department memo seeking to douse conspiracy theories around Jeffrey Epstein has split the MAGA influencer ecosystem into competing factions, with some of President Trump’s loudest
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The Justice Department asked a federal court on Friday to unseal grand jury transcripts in Jeffrey Epstein’s case amid heightened public interest in the disgraced financier’s connection to President Donald Trump and other leaders,
CNN Chief Data Analyst Harry Enten looked at similar figures when he called the current Epstein scandal a "massive unforced error" for the Trump administration.
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Trump calls interest in Epstein case "boring" as Mike Johnson calls for files releasePresident Trump said he doesn't understand why people are interested in the Jeffrey Epstein case while speaking to reporters on Tuesday. Meanwhile, lawmakers, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, are calling for the release of the Epstein files.
MAGA has found a new way to express its fury over the infamous “Epstein files.” President Donald Trump’s fevered support base has been in an uproar after the Departmnet of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation confirmed in a memo July 6 the disgraced financier kept no “client list” and likely died by suicide while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges,
ABC News senior political correspondent Rachel Scott reports on the political fallout of the DOJ’s handling of the Epstein case.