How 'Epstein files' row clouded Pam Bondi's stint as attorney general
The furor over the “Epstein files” wasn't the only controversy of Pam Bondi's tenure as the attorney general.
PTI
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Pam Bondi has rejected criticism of how she handled the 'Epstein files' (White House)
New York, 3 Apr
After Pam Bondi became US attorney general last year,
conservative influencers, online sleuths and others who wanted the government
to disclose all it knew about Jeffrey Epstein thought they might have a
champion in the Department of Justice.
So did Jess Michaels, one of the legions of women who have
said they were sexually assaulted by the late financier and convicted sex
offender with a roster of powerful friends in business, politics and beyond.
“I thought, Well, maybe a woman stepping into this role will
finally, finally get the truth,'” Michaels recalled Thursday, after President
Donald Trump announced Bondi was out of the nation's top law enforcement job.
“She had this opportunity to be a hero and to really do
right by survivors of sexual violence and trafficking,” Michaels said,
"and she chose not to.”
The furor over the “Epstein files,” as the trove of
investigative records came to be known, wasn't the only controversy of Bondi's
tenure. But the arc — first raising expectations for a big reveal, then
declaring there was nothing to see, and ultimately a forced, flawed document
dump — was a stubbornly problematic storyline that ran through her time as
attorney general.
Bondi rejected criticism of her handling of the matter, and
Trump on Thursday praised her as “a Great American Patriot and a loyal friend.”
Michaels and other Epstein victims watched it all with
shaken trust that Bondi's departure alone won't likely rebuild.
“This is not about a single person,” accuser Annie Farmer
said Thursday. “It is about a government and judicial system that has repeatedly
failed Epstein survivors.”
Here's a glance at
Bondi's part in the Epstein saga:
Freshly confirmed as attorney general for a President who
had suggested on the campaign trail that he'd open more government documents on
Epstein, Bondi whetted appetites by declaring on Fox News that “you're going to
see some Epstein information released.” And when a host asked about
"releasing “the list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients” — a long-rumoured,
never-seen sex trafficking roster — she replied that it was “sitting on my desk
right now.”
A day later, conservative commentators and content creators
were brought to the White House to get DOJ binders emblazoned with “The Epstein
Files: Phase 1” and “Declassified.”
The attempt to showcase transparency soon backfired, once it
emerged that the contents largely were already public. Bondi demanded that the
FBI give her “the full and complete Epstein files,” and she later said that
she'd unearthed a "truckload” of previously withheld material and that
“everything is going to come out to the public.”
The ‘client list’
& walkback
After months of anticipation, the Justice Department said it
wouldn't release any more Epstein material. A court had sealed much of it to
protect victims, and “only a fraction” would have come out if Epstein had gone
to trial, the agency said in an unsigned memo. It added that authorities hadn't
found evidence that merited new charges or investigations and that “perpetuating
unfounded theories about Epstein” wouldn't help victims get justice.
And, it said, there was no “client list.” As for Bondi's
prior comment that it was on her desk, officials said she had meant the overall
case file.
Conservative influencers, among others, blasted the
turnabout and questioned Bondi's capability. But Trump stood by her, scolding a
journalist for attempting to ask her a question about Epstein at a White House
Cabinet meeting.
Trump had himself raised questions for some years after
Epstein's 2019 death in jail as the financier faced federal sex trafficking
charges. After the Justice Department memo, however, the president suggested
there was nothing more to say about Epstein and the country, including his own
supporters, should simply move on.
November 2025: The
legislation
Amid a drumbeat of disclosures that begin to exact
consequences for some powerful people — particularly Andrew
Mountbatten-Windsor, Britain's former Prince Andrew — Congress passed
legislation to force the Justice Department to disclose its investigative files
on Epstein. Trump signed it into law, casting the quest for Epstein information
as a Democratic-led distraction from the Republican agenda.
Meanwhile, at his urging, Bondi announced that the U.S.
attorney in Manhattan would investigate Epstein's ties to some of the
Republican president's political foes, including Democratic former President
Bill Clinton. None has been accused of misconduct by Epstein's accusers; nor
has Trump, another former Epstein friend. Both Clinton and Trump have said they
knew nothing about Epstein's misconduct and cut ties with him many years ago.
The first batch of documents
At the statutory deadline for making the Epstein files
public, the Justice Department released only some of them. While the records
included some material the public hadn't previously seen, including some candid
photos of Clinton, the documents didn't break major ground and included little
about Trump.
The department said it was continuing to review other
Epstein records to make sure that victims were protected.
But Democrats cried cover-up, bill sponsor Rep. Thomas
Massie, R-Ky., accused the Justice Department of breaking the law by missing
the deadline and redacting too much, and some Epstein accusers also questioned
the extensive redactions.
The Justice Department began releasing a huge cache of
additional Epstein documents, videos and photos, though others remained under
wraps.
The records pulled back a curtain on favor-trading and frank
communications in a chummy elite that looked past Epstein's 2008 guilty plea to
soliciting prostitution from an underage girl in Florida. Some high-flying
Epstein friends resigned or lost jobs in corporate America, academia, big law
firms, the British, Slovakian and Norwegian governments and beyond.
But the documents disclosed highly personal information
about some victims while redacting the names of Epstein correspondents in, for
example, emails that appeared to refer to the sexual abuse of underage girls.
Gloria Allred, an attorney for numerous Epstein victims,
said Thursday that Bondi betrayed them by failing to protect personal
information in the files.
“She has destroyed the trust in the DOJ that victims had a
right to expect, and her termination may be the only type of justice that
survivors will receive from the DOJ,” Allred said by email.
The hearing in 2026
At a congressional hearing, a combative Bondi tried to quell
the Epstein files controversy. She defended how the Justice Department dealt
with it, lobbed personal insults at Democrats and lauded Trump over, among
other things, the performance of the stock market.
Bondi said she was deeply sorry for what Epstein victims
suffered. But she declined a request from Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., to
face and apologize to them for the Justice Department's actions, and Bondi
dismissed Massie's critiques of the release of victims' personal information.
The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
subpoenaed Bondi to answer questions on April 14 about the Justice Department's
handling of the Epstein investigation and file release. With five Republicans
joining Democrats to support the subpoena, it reflected widespread discontent,
including in the GOP base, over Bondi's management of the matter.
The future
For now, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will be the
acting attorney general.
Michaels, who travelled to the Capitol last year to press
for the files' release, wanted Bondi gone. But will Blanche do better?
"We can only hope. But given that they worked together,
I don't have great expectations,” she said.
The Associated Press generally does not identify people who
say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as
Michaels has done.
Robert Glassman, an attorney for a woman who testified as
“Jane” in the 2021 criminal trial of Epstein confidante Ghislaine Maxwell,
noted that agency leaders come and go.
“For victims of sexual abuse, what matters is whether the
institutions meant to protect them actually do their job,” he said.
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