Confronted
Over Epstein Files, Trump and Bondi Tell Supporters to Move On
A small but
influential cohort of the president’s far-right political coalition spared him
their ire but turned with a vengeance on the attorney general and the top
officials at the F.B.I.
Glenn Thrush Stuart A. Thompson
By Glenn
Thrush and Stuart A. Thompson
July 8, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/08/us/politics/trump-epstein.html
President
Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi once suggested they would expose the
hidden, potentially sinister truth about Jeffrey Epstein’s death in 2019. On
Tuesday, they had a message to supporters incensed by the decision to close the
case once and for all: Get over it.
“You still
talking about Jeffrey Epstein?” Mr. Trump, visibly exasperated, asked a
reporter at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, the day after the Justice Department
released a memo concluding that “no further disclosure would be appropriate or
warranted” in the investigation of Mr. Epstein, the disgraced financier and
convicted sex offender.
Ms. Bondi,
the main target of critics on the right, added, “He committed suicide.”
But Epstein
obsessives, who make up a small but influential cohort of Mr. Trump’s far-right
political coalition, showed zero inclination to move on — quite the opposite,
in fact. They largely spared Mr. Trump, but have turned with a vengeance on Ms.
Bondi; the F.B.I. director, Kash Patel; and his top deputy, Dan Bongino, for
failing to come up with anything new or salacious in a case that multiple
investigations have long deemed a dead end.
“She needs
to resign,” wrote Laura Loomer, a Trump ally who has suggested, without
evidence, that the department had suppressed evidence that Mr. Epstein was
murdered. “The American people and MAGA base will not tolerate being lied to.”
Elon Musk,
who has had a falling-out with Mr. Trump, has criticized the Justice Department
and the president himself over the Epstein case. “How can people be expected to
have faith in Trump if he won’t release the Epstein files?” Mr. Musk posted on
social media on Tuesday afternoon.
There are no
indications that Mr. Trump is considering replacing Ms. Bondi or anyone else
over the investigation, which has occupied a remarkable amount of government
time and political attention. But he clearly wants it behind him and was
visibly agitated to be asked questions about it during the meeting, which was
intended to celebrate recent foreign policy and legislative victories and to
discuss the deadly floods in Texas.
That the
attorney general was a central target of the right was not unexpected. In
February, Ms. Bondi — eager to take on a high-profile task earlier in her
tenure — told Fox News that the Epstein “client list” was sitting on her desk,
giving hope to right-wing figures that more disclosures were imminent. But as
weeks passed, little new information was released and frustration mounted.
Over the
past few months, Ms. Bondi has privately expressed concerns that her early
public missteps on the Epstein files will hurt her standing with the White
House. And there are concerns among some of Ms. Bondi’s allies inside and
outside the Justice Department that the withering and relentless criticism she
is facing will ultimately take its toll — even if she has proved willing to
serve as a political shield for the president on the case.
In recent
months, dozens of F.B.I. agents, along with prosecutors typically assigned to
national security investigations, were diverted to examine case files and video
for evidence.
Prominent
right-wing podcasters and influencers flatly rejected the Trump
administration’s claim this week that Mr. Epstein did not keep a “sex
trafficking” client list and that there was no incriminating evidence of
additional perpetrators involved in Mr. Epstein’s sexual crimes.
Stephen K.
Bannon, a former Trump adviser, lashed out against federal law enforcement
agencies, insisting, “We have to take these apparatuses down.”
Tucker
Carlson, the former Fox News host, called the memo a “cover-up” after it was
released.
“The
president promised to reveal the truth about this. Pam Bondi, as you said, went
on television and said, ‘We have the truth, we’re going to give it to you,’”
Mr. Carlson told the guest on his podcast on Tuesday. “I think this is a big
deal.”
Fox News
even joined the fray, broadcasting a banner during Jesse Watters’ prime-time
show that blared, “WE NEED ANSWERS ON EPSTEIN.”
The outrage
amounted to some of the most pointed criticism to date against Mr. Trump’s
administration from a flank of right-wing media that is normally deeply loyal
to the president. It underscored the challenges facing his officials as they
navigate leading federal agencies they had once targeted with criticism and
conspiracy theories.
Until
February, Mr. Bongino, the deputy F.B.I. director, was a podcaster who had
railed against the F.B.I. for covering up investigations and crimes, including
around Mr. Epstein. Since joining the F.B.I., though, he has tried to downplay
the case, rejecting a conspiracy theory that Mr. Epstein was murdered while in
custody.
Now, his
livestreaming slot is filled by Vince Coglianese, who criticized the memo this
week.
“The whole
internet’s all up in arms about this, and rightfully so,” he said. “Because you
just want crystal-clear answers.”
Some
influencers shifted blame to the Biden administration, asserting, without proof
that anything nefarious occurred, that it had four years in power to get rid of
evidence that could have implicated others. (Mr. Epstein was arrested and
charged during Mr. Trump’s first term.)
“A lot of
the evidence, the tapes, etc., was destroyed and erased a long time ago,”
claimed Buck Sexton, the co-host of “The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show.”
Ms. Bondi,
addressing criticism of her actions at the cabinet meeting, said on Tuesday
that the department had exhausted every investigative option. She also disputed
the notion, pushed by some critics, that she was covering up the truth by
refusing to release thousands of hours of videotapes analyzed by investigators.
“They turned
out to be child porn downloaded by that disgusting Jeffrey Epstein,” Ms. Bondi
said. “Never going to see the light of day.”
Teresa
Mondría Terol contributed reporting.
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.
Stuart A.
Thompson writes about how false and misleading information spreads online and
how it affects people around the world. He focuses on misinformation,
disinformation and other misleading content.
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