United States Attorney General
Pamela J. Bondi, serving as U.S. Attorney General under President Trump's administration, has been involved in the handling of Jeffrey Epstein-related matters through her role overseeing the Department of Justice. As Attorney General, Bondi has faced significant Congressional scrutiny regarding the DOJ's management of declassified Epstein files, including decisions about document redactions, investigative priorities toward alleged co-conspirators, and treatment of survivors. In February 2026, she testified before the House Judiciary Committee where six Epstein survivors publicly stated they had not been afforded meetings with the DOJ under her watch. Bondi's tenure has been marked by controversy over the DOJ's refusal to indict Epstein co-conspirators (reportedly zero indictments in her first year as AG), the firing of lead Epstein prosecutor Maurene Comey, and allegations of withholding key prosecutorial documents. However, no charges, convictions, arrests, or formal legal determinations of criminal accountability have been documented against Bondi herself in the Epstein case. Her involvement is administrative and political in nature, relating to her official duties as Attorney General.
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Attorney General Pamela Bondi, in conjunction with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), declassified and publicly released files related to convicted sex …
A 2026 congressional report highlighted that investigators had not been able to formally offer Epstein's assistants, particularly Lesley Groff, the chance to co…
Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, led Judiciary Committee Democrats in cross-examining Attorney General Pam Bondi for the dama…
President Donald Trump on Friday directed Attorney General Pam Bondi and the FBI to investigate links between Jeffrey Epstein and notable Democrats. Bondi quick…
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