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House and Senate near-unanimous on Epstein. What will Trump's DOJ do next?

edited November 19 in Off-Topic
Following are excerpts from a current report in The Guardian:

Legislation next goes to Trump who indicated he would sign bill after he and his allies backed down from opposition
The Senate on Tuesday gave swift approval to legislation that will force the release of investigative files related to the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, following a near-unanimous vote in the US House of Representatives and a reversal by Donald Trump and his Republican allies who relented after months of trying to forestall the bipartisan effort involving a scandal that has dogged the president since his return to the White House.

The Senate acted by unanimous consent, which requires approval from each senator but does not require a formal roll call vote, expediting the process. Hours earlier, the House overwhelmingly approved the bill on a 427-1 tally. Once the legislation is forwarded to the Senate, it will be automatically approved.

The bill next goes to Trump for his signature. The president indicated on Monday that he would sign the measure.

The Epstein case returned dramatically to the public eye in July, when the justice department and FBI released a memo saying they had nothing further to disclose about the investigation. That flew in the face of statements made by Trump and his top officials that indicated they would release more information about Epstein’s offenses and ties to global elites once they took office.

Shortly after, four dissident Republicans in the House and all Democrats banded together to force a vote on a bill to release the investigative files, over Johnson’s objections. The leaders of that effort cheered the imminent vote, with the Democratic congressman Ro Khanna calling Tuesday “the first day of real reckoning for the Epstein class”.

“Because survivors spoke up, because of their courage, the truth is finally going to come out, and when it comes out, this country is really going to have a moral reckoning. How did we allow this to happen?” Khanna said at a press conference, adding that the case was “one of the most horrific and disgusting corruption scandals in our country’s history.”

Trump’s friendship with Epstein has had staying power in American politics as the late disgraced financier had links to many other rich and powerful figures in the US and overseas. The president’s dramatic shift came after it became increasingly apparent that the bill would pass the GOP-controlled House, most likely with significant support from Republican lawmakers. Trump in recent days changed his approach from outright opposition to declarations of indifference.

“We’ll give them everything,” he told reporters. “Let the Senate look at it, let anybody look at it, but don’t talk about it too much, because honestly, I don’t want to take it away from us.” Thomas Massie, an iconoclastic Republican congressman who frequently defies Trump and joined with Khanna to pursue the files’ release, noted the president’s reversal on the Epstein issue: “We fought the president, the attorney general, the FBI director, the speaker of the House and the vice-president to get this win,” he said. “But they’re on our side today, though, so let’s give them some credit as well.”

In July, Khanna and Massie turned to a procedural tactic known as a discharge petition to circumvent House leadership and compel a vote on their bill, the Epstein Files Transparency Act, if a majority of the 435-member House signs on. Johnson went to extraordinary lengths to avoid a vote on the the measure, which splintered his conference. Democrats accused the speaker of delaying the swearing-in of the Arizona Democrat Adelita Grijalva to prevent her from becoming the decisive 218th signatory. She signed her name to the petition moments after officially taking office last week.

As president, Trump has the authority to order the justice department to release the documents in its possession, as he has previously done with the government records related to the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and John F Kennedy. Emails made public last week by a House committee that has opened a separate inquiry into the scandal showed Epstein believed Trump “knew about the girls”, though it was not clear what that phrase meant. The White House said the released emails contained no proof of wrongdoing by Trump.

Last week, the president instructed the justice department to investigate prominent Democrats’ ties to Epstein. The US attorney general, Pam Bondi, who earlier this year said a review of the files revealed no further investigative leads, replied to Trump that she would get on it right away and has appointed a prosecutor to lead the effort.

The Epstein scandal is a core issue for a swathe of Trump’s rightwing base, some of whom believe in conspiracy theories that surround Epstein and his coterie of powerful friends and associates. Unlike many other issues, the Epstein files have prompted rebellions from Trump’s supporters in politics and the media, who have called on the president to follow through on his campaign promise to release them.

On Monday night, activists projected an image of Trump and Epstein on to the justice department building, accompanied by the message: “Release the files now.”

Comments

  • This is indeed good news. I'm just waiting for that shoe to drop. What kind of crapola shenanigans will uncle Trumpy and dear little Mikey and sweet Pamela get into before we get to see what's actually there?
  • Erase, erase, erase... redact, redact, redact, "lose", "lose", "lose", shred, shred, shred...
  • I'm hoping some inside individual had courage and has a thumb drive at home with a lot of info on it and he "accidently" loses it outside ABC news.
  • edited November 19
    "The bill forces the release within 30 days of all files and communications related to Epstein,
    as well as any information about the investigation into his death in federal prison.
    It would allow the Justice Department to redact information about Epstein’s victims
    or continuing federal investigations, but not information due to 'embarrassment,
    reputational harm, or political sensitivity.'
    "

    "Even as the bill cleared his chamber, Johnson pressed for the Senate to amend it
    to protect the information of 'victims and whistleblowers.'
    But Senate Majority Leader John Thune quickly shut down that notion."

    "As senators gathered in the chamber Tuesday evening for the first votes of the week,
    it became clear no one would object to passing the bill as written."

    https://apnews.com/article/epstein-files-congress-trump-house-297a66ce48bd2a67c571bc643e32ef71

    Comments: The bill only allows redacting information pertaining to Epstein's victims
    or continuing federal investigations. I'm sceptical this will actually happen but we'll see...
  • Following is a current report in The Guardian:

    Justice department will release Epstein files within 30 days, Bondi says
    The US justice department will release files from its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein within 30 days, attorney general Pam Bondi has said, after Congress voted nearly unanimously to force Donald Trump’s administration to make them public.

    The scandal has been a thorn in Trump’s side for months, partly because he amplified conspiracy theories about Epstein to his own supporters. Many Trump voters believe his administration has covered up Epstein’s ties to powerful figures and obscured details surrounding his death, which was ruled a suicide, in a Manhattan jail in 2019 as he faced federal sex trafficking charges.

    At a news conference today, Bondi confirmed that the DOJ will release its Epstein-related material within 30 days, as required by legislation that passed the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and Senate yesterday. “We will continue to follow the law and encourage maximum transparency,” she said.

    But that release may not be comprehensive, as the agency may have to hold back material that could impact Trump-ordered investigations of Democratic figures who associated with Epstein.

    The department will also protect the identities of any sex-trafficking victims whose names appear in the documents, she said.
  • Trump lost this battle bigly. He only agreed AFTER it was 100% clear that he could not win. Which is an attempt to minimize the damage he caused himself by trying to stop the release.

    I would expect that important heads will roll. L Summers is already getting destroyed. Others will too.
  • "L Summers is already getting destroyed."

    And good riddance, too.
  • Let the chips fall where they may!
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