Trump, Epstein
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Epstein, Larry Summers
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The House is expected to vote on a measure on Nov. 18 that would force the Justice Department to release all of its records on Jeffrey Epstein.
Connections between the sex offender Epstein and powerful men, including Trump, are the focus of feverish attention, especially with a House vote expected Tuesday on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which calls for the release of case documents known as the Epstein files.
The vote comes after Trump reversed course and encouraged House Republicans to support the measure he had previously opposed.
Photographic evidence proves the president spent at least some time with the late sex offender, despite Trump’s claims otherwise.
President Donald Trump reversed course and backed a House bill that's expected to get a vote Tuesday forcing DOJ to release its Jeffrey Epstein files.
Former Democratic treasury secretary Larry Summers is “deeply ashamed” of his years-long communication with Jeffrey Epstein and will be “stepping back from public commitments,” he said in a statement Monday night.
Among national voters, 47% said they think the Trump administration should release the Epstein files with victims’ names redacted. Among Utahns, that number was 56%. Only 3% nationally and 4% of voters in Utah think no documents should be released.
Historian Andrew Lownie says he has seen “internal FBI correspondence” that contradicts the official story of Jeffrey Epstein’s death.