Live updates: Prosecutor General Pam Bondi testifies before the Senate Judicial Committee

Epstein file management was a problem for Bondi all year round.
After having published certain documents at the beginning of this year to conservative influencers and by promising more, the Ministry of Justice and the FBI in July published a memo indicating that there was no evidence that Epstein kept a “list of customers” or was murdered.
Almost immediately, the DoJ and the FBI faced a fervent decline in certain criticisms, who accused the managers of having hidden information on the case. Bondi said there are no additional files that can be made public, because many include information to identify victims or non -loaded persons who cannot be made public.
The battle reached Capitol Hill while the legislators demanded that all the files be made available to them for examination. The DoJ has since published documents, although most of them are already accessible to the public.
Legislators are still working to obtain more information on two fronts: an investigation is already underway by the Chamber’s supervisory committee, and there is an effort by the republican representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, who seeks to oblige the MJ to publish a complete and not expelled version of documents.




