Trump, Epstein and MAGA
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Grand Jury, Jeffrey Epstein and Trump
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President Donald Trump's name was mentioned nine times across the hundreds of pages in the “phase one" release of the Epstein files.
Since Donald Trump returned to the White House, his Justice Department has promised, reneged, and then promised again to deliver new and potentially explosive evidence on the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged underworld of pedophilia.
The 2019 suicide of disgraced financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in a New York jail cell generated conspiracy theories, fueled by U.S. President Donald Trump's conservative MAGA movement, that he was killed by one of his famous connections.
President Donald Trump on Friday implied there is no "smoking gun" in the Jeffrey Epstein files as he seeks to downplay a case that's long animated his MAGA supporters.
A s the questions surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s life and death—questions that Donald Trump once helped whip up—tornadoed into their bajillionth news cycle, the president’s team began to privately debate ways to calm the furor: appoint a special counsel to investigate.
Here’s what to know about the disturbing facts and unsubstantiated suspicions that make Jeffrey Epstein, a registered sex offender, a politically potent obsession.
Responding to a report about his former relationship with Epstein, Trump said, “I never wrote a picture in my life." The record suggests otherwise.
President Trump called the story false, malicious, and defamatory. The president then called on the release of pertinent transcript from the grand jury for Jeffrey Epstein’s trial in New York – a trial that never took place after Epstein died by suicide in his jail cell in 2019.
CNN’s Kaitlan Collins covers another busy week at the White House where President Trump has struggled to move attention away from the Epstein saga.
Harry Enten said the figures "surprised" him as the president navigates GOP criticism on his administration's handling of the Epstein files.