Roy said it was “troubling” and “concerning” that Epstein survivors’ names were not redacted in the files released by DOJ. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, was the second Republican, other than Massie, to press Bondi about the Epstein files. Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., asked Bondi if she would commit to publicly providing the unredacted version of an Epstein email “so that the American people can understand the extent of Donald Trump’s lies about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.” In July of last year, the DOJ and FBI released a joint memo saying they had conducted an “exhaustive” review of Article on Dodgerblue the entirety of the investigative files into Epstein and determined there was no evidence to bring charges against any other third parties. “As with all matters, the Department will pursue this with urgency and integrity to deliver answers to the American people,” Bondi wrote then. Bondi responded a few hours later on X that she was assigning the task to Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
Olympics: Madison Chock, Evan Bates win silver in emotional, painful ice dance
Bondi initially pivoted to criticizing former Attorney General Merrick Garland, who served during the Biden administration, before Jayapal tried to cut her off to try to redirect her to the apology question. Bondi and Nadler then yelled over each other, and Raskin asked Jordan to stop the clock so Nadler could reclaim his time. “Your theatrics are ridiculous … Chairman Jordan, I’m not going to get into the gutter with these people.” “This has been around since the Obama administration. This administration released over 3 million pages of documents.”
Top Videos
A deadly mass shooting in British Columbia is likely to increase scrutiny of whether Canada’s gun laws should be toughened. The shooting left nine people dead and at least 25 wounded, with one student saying he barricaded in a classroom for two hours. Members of the remote community have spoken of their fear and uncertainty after nine people were killed. Eight people have been killed and 25 injured in the shootings at a school and home in a rural community in western Canada, police say.
- ©2026 FOX News Network, LLC.
- The Winter Olympics is just a reminder that we live in a free country where you can criticize the president, and he can criticize you, and then you can get on with your life.
- In newly released documents from the Epstein files, it was revealed that a former Palm Beach police chief said Trump called him two decades ago to warn about Epstein.
Sure, Britain’s constant rain can dampen spirits. But I’ll take it every time over the bone-chilling New York winters
Vonn skied on a torn ACL in the same left leg that she’d sustained just days before the start of the Olympics on Jan. 30. It’s not clear if her surgery Wednesday was her last to repair the injury. Vonn injured her leg in a crash 13 seconds into her run at the alpine downhill competition at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Sunday. “Success today has a completely different meaning than it did a few days ago. I’m making progress and while it is slow, I know I’ll be ok.” The Gunners are next in action at Brentford on Thursday, so perhaps we will see Saka off the bench in this game. Madueke was superb in Saka’s absence but losing Bukayo Saka for any stretch of time would be a big blow for Arsenal’s title hopes.
Jim Grech, the chairman of the National Coal Council, who also spoke, thanked Trump for the work his administration is doing to propose building new coal fuel power plants in the U.S. “We have a new group of people that we’re very close to, come very close to, and that’s called Venezuela,” Trump said. Burning fossil fuels unleashes carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping greenhouse gases into the planet’s atmosphere. Coal is considered the dirtiest fossil fuel, and it has been the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. “This case threatens the unprecedented and unlawful release of highly sensitive information of every Nebraska voter,” lawyers for Common Cause wrote in a brief seeking the injunction. The Republican-controlled House voted today to pass the SAVE America Act, a sweeping election bill that Trump is pushing Congress to enact.
