News
Analysis
Justice
Department to Investigate Epstein Ties, but Not to Trump
President
Trump ordered the Justice Department to investigate the dealings of Democrats
with Jeffrey Epstein, after a week in which his own relationship with the
convicted sex offender was in the spotlight.
Erica L.
GreenGlenn ThrushAlan Feuer
By Erica
L. GreenGlenn Thrush and Alan Feuer
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/us/politics/trump-epstein-inquiry-democrats.html
Nov. 14,
2025
When a
trove of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails were made public this week, Donald J. Trump’s
name was all over them. But on Friday, when Mr. Trump demanded that the Justice
Department investigate a list of powerful men mentioned in the emails, his own
name was nowhere to be seen — he had singled out only Democrats.
Equally
remarkable was how quickly Attorney General Pam Bondi acquiesced to his demand,
even though four months ago the Justice Department formally declared that
nothing in the Epstein files warranted further investigation.
That
about-face, as much as any action Ms. Bondi has taken this year, demonstrated
the near-complete breakdown of the Justice Department’s traditional
independence to prosecute cases based on facts and the law, as opposed to
presidential fiat. And, crucially, it could foreclose any further disclosures
of the Epstein files.
“This is
another Russia, Russia, Russia Scam, with all arrows pointing to the
Democrats,” Mr. Trump wrote on social media on Friday. “Records show that these
men, and many others, spent large portions of their life with Epstein, and on
his ‘Island.’ Stay tuned!!!”
Less than
four hours later, Ms. Bondi said she had chosen Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney
in Manhattan to handle the matter.
“Thank
you,” she wrote to Mr. Trump in a post on X. “Attorney Jay Clayton is one of
the most capable and trusted prosecutors in the country, and I’ve asked him to
take the lead. As with all matters, the Department will pursue this with
urgency and integrity to deliver answers to the American people.”
Mr.
Trump’s response to this week’s Epstein revelations was the reprise of a
deflective tactic he has often deployed in instances of crisis: When the
spotlight begins to burn, Mr. Trump deflects, points fingers or changes the
conversation. He even tries to pull his adversaries, often one of the Clintons,
into the scene with him — then he exits stage right.
That was
his approach in the fall of 2016, when the “Access Hollywood” tape threatened
to sink his campaign. Then — and now — Mr. Trump’s main target was former
President Bill Clinton, whom he claimed had done far worse.
The
latest demand by Mr. Trump came after congressional Democrats released emails
earlier this week that suggested the president’s knowledge of Mr. Epstein’s
sex-trafficking operation was deeper than previously known.
Mr. Trump
has emphatically denied any involvement in or knowledge of Mr. Epstein’s
sex-trafficking operation.
On
Friday, Mr. Trump reiterated his baseless claims about the Democrats he
targeted for investigation, and downplayed the revelations about Mr. Epstein’s
frequent mentions of their relationship.
On a
flight to West Palm Beach, Fla., he told reporters that he and Mr. Epstein “had
a very bad relationship for many years.”
Instead
of focusing on Mr. Epstein’s own recollections, Mr. Trump said, “you’ve got to
find out what did he know with respect to Bill Clinton, with respect to the
head of Harvard.”
Ms.
Bondi’s decision to press forward with the investigation is a complete
turnaround from a memo issued by the Justice Department and the F.B.I. in July,
which said that officials had thoroughly scrutinized the Epstein files and had
found nothing in them that could sustain opening further inquiries into anyone
else.
Still, if
an investigation into any one of the targets suggested by Mr. Trump were to
ultimately start, it could allow the Justice Department to refuse to release
any further files related to Mr. Epstein by claiming that the disclosures could
harm continuing inquiries.
In his
social media post connecting Democrats with Mr. Epstein, Mr. Trump named Mr.
Clinton, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, and the venture capitalist
and megadonor Reid Hoffman.
The newly
released emails “prove Bill Clinton did nothing and knew nothing,” said Angel
Ureña, a spokesman for Mr. Clinton. “The rest is noise meant to distract from
election losses, backfiring shutdowns and who knows what else.”
On X, Mr.
Hoffman called on Mr. Trump to release all the Epstein files. “I want this
complete release because it will show that the calls for baseless
investigations of me are nothing more than political persecution and slander,”
he said, adding that he also wanted justice for Mr. Epstein’s victims.
A
representative for Mr. Summers declined to comment.
Mr. Trump
also said he wanted law enforcement officials to investigate “J.P. Morgan,
Chase, and many other people and institutions.” A recent investigation by The
New York Times found that the bank had spent years supporting — and profiting
from — Mr. Epstein, ignoring a series of red flags about his conduct.
Mr.
Hoffman has apologized for his interactions with Mr. Epstein, saying that he
“helped to repair his reputation and perpetuate injustice” and that he was
“deeply regretful.” Mr. Clinton has denied having a close relationship with Mr.
Epstein, and in 2019, his office released a statement saying that Mr. Clinton
knew “nothing about the terrible crimes” that Mr. Epstein had been accused of.
The statement also said he had never been to Mr. Epstein’s island, and that he
had not spoken to him in more than a decade.
Mr.
Summers, who served as Treasury secretary under Mr. Clinton, and who was
revealed to have frequently bantered with Mr. Epstein, referred to previous
statements in which he acknowledged “regretting my past associations with Mr.
Epstein.” (Mr. Summers, who also served as the president of Harvard University
from 2001 to 2006, is a contributing writer for The Times’s Opinion section).
Ms.
Bondi’s decision to assign an investigation to the Southern District of New
York could create significant conflict within an office known for its
investigative might and independence.
The
office’s leadership flatly refused strong-arm pressure from the Justice
Department to sign off on withdrawal of the bribery indictment of Mayor Eric
Adams of New York City earlier this year, leading to a wave of resignations and
forcing a top aide to Ms. Bondi to appear on behalf of the government to make
the request in court himself.
Mr.
Clayton, a former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission who spent
nearly two decades at the white shoe law firm Sullivan & Cromwell, enjoys a
reputation in New York legal circles as a widely respected lawyer.
Still,
like other Trump appointees, he has been known to flatter the president at
times. Last month, for instance, in an appearance on CNBC that rankled many of
his subordinates in the Southern District, he accused many prominent lawyers of
having “stayed silent” when Mr. Trump was charged in four separate criminal
cases.
On
Wednesday, House Democrats released emails in which Mr. Epstein wrote that Mr.
Trump had “spent hours at my house” with one of Mr. Epstein’s victims, and that
Mr. Trump “knew about the girls,” many of whom were later found by
investigators to have been underage.
Also on
Wednesday, Republicans made public a tranche of emails from Mr. Epstein’s
estate in which Mr. Trump was mentioned several times.
In
another email released this week, Mr. Epstein wrote “Clinton was NEVER EVER
there, never,” referring to his private island that Mr. Trump mentioned.
The
releases reignited a firestorm around Mr. Trump’s relationship with Mr. Epstein
that has roiled his supporters, who want the government to release to the
public all evidence it has on Mr. Epstein’s crimes and relationships to
high-profile officials.
The White
House has said that Mr. Trump was not involved in Mr. Epstein’s operations and
that he had cut off his friendship with Mr. Epstein in the mid-2000s — the two
apparently had a falling out after Mr. Epstein tried to steal a spa attendant
from Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club. The latest document releases were an attempt
to smear the president, the White House said.
“These
emails prove absolutely nothing other than the fact that President Trump did
nothing wrong,” Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said on
Wednesday.
Democrats
accused Mr. Trump of trying to shift the focus away from himself.
Representative
Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrat on the Oversight Committee,
accused Mr. Trump in a statement of trying to distract. “Our Oversight
investigation has Donald Trump panicked and desperate,” he said. “He is trying
to deflect from serious new questions we have about his relationship with
Jeffrey Epstein.”
Representative
Don Bacon, Republican of Nebraska, who will retire at the end of his term,
criticized Mr. Trump for undermining the independence of the Justice
Department. “When the president gives orders to Pam Bondi and our law
enforcement arms of the federal government, it undercuts the credibility of our
law enforcement,” he said in an interview on CNN. “I don’t think it’s
appropriate for him to do it.”
Michael
Gold and Theodore Schleifer contributed reporting.
Erica L.
Green is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written
about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and
prisons.
Alan
Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the
criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former
President Donald J. Trump.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário