Trump, Epstein
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Although his death was ruled to be a suicide, conspiracy theories arose about the way Epstein died.
The Justice Department and FBI are struggling to contain the fallout from the decision to withhold records from the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking investigation. What do you think?
Jeffrey Epstein's case continues years after his death, with new images of Maxwell in prison and a government memo upholds suicide while revealing over 1,000 victims
The face of ESPN is weighing in on the case of notorious child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, and he doesn’t understand why people seem to care so much about the story. Appearing Friday on Chris Cuomo’s NewsNation show,
The drama surrounding the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files is still boiling over among loyalists of President Donald Trump. Deputy director of the FBI Dan Bongino is considering leaving his job after a confrontation with Attorney General Pam Bondi over his frustration over how the Justice Department has handled the situation,
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Trump takes to Truth Social to support Attorney General Pam Bondi who has faced backlash from MAGA supporters regarding the DOJ's management of Jeffrey Epstein documents.
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PRIMETIMER on MSNWhat did Prince Andrew say about Jeffrey Epstein? Royal trends on X amid backlash over Epstein casePrince Andrew addressed his ties with Jeffrey Epstein during a BBC Newsnight interview with Emily Maitlis in November 2019
Donald Trump urged MAGA supporters to stop attacking Pam Bondi over the way she has handled the Epstein files.
Dan Bongino clashed with Attorney General Pam Bondi and White House chief of staff Susie Wiles in a heated meeting about the Epstein memo that found no client list existed.
A review of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein has sparked a conflict between Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, sources say.
On Monday, the Justice Department and the FBI released a memo evoking outrage from both President Donald Trump’s critics and his most ardent supporters.
Historian Richard Hofstadter was a pioneer observer of what he called “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” which he described in a 1964 Harper’s Magazine analysis of the use of loose facts and pseudo-facts to build an alternative reality for political ends.