Trump, Rupert Murdoch and Jeffrey Epstein
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Trump is facing mounting pressure from his MAGA base to publicly release Justice Department files from the Epstein case.
White House officials and other Trump allies said that the president, not the attorney general, has been the one having to answer questions about Jeffrey Epstein.
Despite recent claims by President Donald Trump that former Biden officials doctored files related to Jeffrey Epstein, many of the documents -- including those mentioning Trump and several prominent Democrats -- have been public for years.
The president threatened to sue the newspaper and News Corp for publishing an article about a letter bearing his name that was included in a 2003 birthday album for Jeffrey Epstein.
"All the work that we did to tell the world what happened to us, it’s all being erased," victim Danielle Bensky said.
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Amid a deepening furor from far-right supporters over his administration's reluctance to make public the so-called Jeffrey Epstein files, President Donald Trump on Thursday directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to release "any and all" grand jury testimony related to the disgraced,
Donald Trump says that he has been “damaged” in his lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch and The Wall Street Journal. Trump argues that The Journal falsely claimed he sent Jeffrey Epstein a “bawdy” letter on his birthday card.