Donald Trump, Jeffrey Epstein
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The release, which contains photographs of Trump, former President Bill Clinton and other prominent figures, comes amid next week's deadline for the Justice Department to give what files it has on Epstein to Congress.
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee have released photos from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate Friday showing the many powerful figures in the late sex trafficker’s orbit, including President Donald Trump,
Leading House Democrats released two groups of pictures—first, 19 and then later, another 70—on Friday from a reported trove of 95,000 photos that were turned over to the Oversight Committee on Thursday by the Epstein estate.
House Democrats release 95,000 Jeffrey Epstein photos showing Trump, Clinton and others, reviving pressure on the DOJ to release sealed investigative files.
By the time Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting prostitution from an underage girl, he had established an enormous network of wealthy and influential friends. Emails made public this week show the crime did little to diminish the desire of that network to stay connected to the financier.
It’s not what you know, it’s who you know — even if you may have committed terrible crimes. That’s the Jeffrey Epstein version of the famous line about success. The massive tranche of Epstein emails released by the House Oversight Committee didn’t reveal any smoking guns about Donald Trump,
There are times when partisanship shouldn’t matter. As the public waits for the U.S. Department of Justice to release the Epstein files, our nation seems to be underreacting to arguably one of the most significant moral scandals in U.
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Inside Epstein’s inbox: How influence, privilege, and politics kept him untouchable for years
NEW YORK, Nov 17 — Newly released emails from the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein have laid bare the ecosystem of power that protected him, revealing not a shadowy cabal but a system operating in plain sight, where connections and influence insulated ...
Idolizing celebrities and making edits of famous people isn’t new. In the age of online influence mattering to the point of being utilized by official political campaign marketing strategies, it’s not surprising to see that this same trend of “memeing” and fan editing has trickled into our politics.
A few weeks ago, commentator Peggy Tierney wrote a Substack piece in which she referenced a long article — a profile piece — written about Jeffrey Epstein in 2014 by well-known author and journalist Michael Wolff.