Tag: donald trump
Continuing Under Bondi And Patel, The Epstein Coverup Is The Crime

Continuing Under Bondi And Patel, The Epstein Coverup Is The Crime

Last week, independent journalist Jacqueline Sweet penned an “exclusive” report in the New York Post on the 37 missing pages tied to a woman making serious allegations against Donald Trump. Sweet is a solid reporter, with works published in Rolling Stone and The Guardian, and has consistently expressed skepticism – both online and personally to us – about the validity of the woman’s claims.

She has been getting access to material that is not public. In an earlier piece for the Guardian, based on information leaked to her, she revealed that the accuser had a criminal record – which the Department of Justice (DOJ) eventually confirmed by releasing the pages.

Now, someone with access to the full Epstein files has leaked again… but only Sweet and the Murdoch tabloid have gotten a look at the pages. As she wrote: “The 37 pages, which aren’t public but have been reviewed by The Post, include sickening claims that Epstein began abusing the woman during a visit to Hilton Head Island when the accuser was just 13 and forced her to perform oral sex on Trump.”

In her Guardian article, Sweet called the claims “outlandish.” Clearly she finds the witness not at all credible. And that’s fine.

But the decision to share “documents that are not public” with a Murdoch tabloid is curious. Maybe other editors weren’t interested? Or maybe the source doesn’t want them widely read quite yet?

We reported on some of these missing pages early – first, in fact – in a post titled “Protect Source,” the tag attached to the unnamed woman’s claims in the available files. We noticed gaps in the DOJ’s numbering system that indicated they were covering up some missing interviews. We reported the lurid allegations with caveats because the Epstein files contain many unproven claims and we resist the Pizzagate, Satanic-panic theorizing that has been re-emerging amidst the online DIY investigation frenzy.

This particular accusation, however, seemed to warrant closer scrutiny from members of Congress, primarily, we thought, because of the unusual “Protect Source” designation. The story of the missing pages drew mainstream attention from NPR to the New York Times. More than a month later, professional Never Trumpers and Epstein-ologists are still devoting tens of thousands of written and spoken words to the topic.

The impetus for this obsession is the belief that the files hold a silver bullet against Donald Trump: Somewhere, a grown woman who, as a teenager, was preyed upon by a younger Trump, will emerge and finally take him down.

I have some doubts about the woman’s Trump story myself, but the behavior of the DOJ is even more suspicious. First they withheld pages. Then they claimed they were duplicative – which they are not. Then someone leaked a few to Sweet and right-wing news site Breitbart.

The DOJ continues to withhold additional pages. Now they appear to be selectively dropping them to a single journalist and two Trump-friendly outlets.

The accuser’s description of Epstein’s MO certainly sounds familiar: lured to a vacation home, plied with booze, talked into bringing other 13-year-olds around. Plus she described Jeff’s snaggletooth, which he hides in most photographs. Sweet has insisted that there is no evidence Epstein was ever in South Carolina in the ‘80s, but of course the absence of a travel record means nothing. We have already uncovered evidence that he was in unexpected places in the ‘80s, like Kuala Lumpur.

He was still just a Coney Island thug then, on his way to becoming James Bondstein.

But let’s be real about our expectations.

First: Trump’s predatory inclinations are baked into his appeal. He survived E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuit as well as dozens of women alleging that he was, at best, a sex pest and at worst, a sexual assaulter. Will a woman now in her late 50s or 60s with decades-old memories be the person who finally takes down the nearly 80-year-old Leader of the Free World? To paraphrase his infamous 2015 boast: he could probably live down an alleged rape on Fifth Avenue.

Second: Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director "K$H" Patel had their hands deep in the Epstein files early on. In March 2025, FBI agents were pulled away from crime-fighting to scour the files, ostensibly for the mythical “client list” that so obsessed the MAGAs (which in fact already existed publicly in Epstein’s black book), but additionally to “flag” mentions of Donald Trump. An FBI whistleblower told Sen. Dick Durbin, Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, that agents were working 48-hour shifts and given spreadsheets to fill out.

But the coverup started long before that – in Palm Beach, where prosecutors allowed Epstein’s white shoe powerhouse attorneys to send their own investigators into his mansion to remove evidence, including computers, never to be seen again.

It continued in 2019, when FBI agents inside Epstein’s New York mansion – apparently without the proper warrants – let longtime accountant Richard Kahn remove items from a safe, only to return later with a curated selection of whatever had been in it. FBI records of this are murky and deserve congressional attention. This episode is so suspicious and strange that we will devote an entire newsletter to it next week so stay tuned.

The coverup continues to this minute, with the Bondi DOJ still redacting the names of Epstein’s rich and powerful johns.

So: Eyes on the prize. The Epstein coverup IS the crime. And the closest thing we have to a silver bullet.

Nina Burleigh is a journalist, author, documentary producer, and adjunct professor at New York University's Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute. She has written eight books including her recently published novel, Zero Visibility Possible.

Katie Chenoweth is associate professor of French at Princeton University and an investigative researcher.

Reprinted with permission from American Freakshow

Orange Man Goes Green? How Trump's Attack On Iran Is Advancing Clean Energy

Orange Man Goes Green? How Trump's Attack On Iran Is Advancing Clean Energy

Donald Trump has an incredibly childish obsession with outdoing his predecessors, who he constantly derides as stupid and corrupt. There is, of course, no evidence for Trump’s charges, like the supposedly terrible economy he inherited from Biden, but Donald Trump is not a man who feels constrained by reality.

While Trump does everything he can to reverse policies to promote clean energy, overturn trade agreements (including his own), and undermine security pacts, there is one area where Trump looks to substantially outpace the work of his predecessors.

This is in promoting the transition to a non-fossil fuel-based economy. As much as Trump loves oil and coal and seems to relish the prospect of destroying the planet for our kids, his reckless attack on Iran will do a hundred times more to promote clean energy worldwide than all the incentives in Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.

There is both the direct effect of higher oil and gas prices resulting from the closing of the Straits of Hormuz, but also a more important indirect effect. Trump has shown the world that it is dangerous to rely on imported oil and natural gas as energy sources.

This applies not only to imports from the Middle East, which apparently any jerk can shut down on a whim. The risks probably apply even more strongly to reliance on the United States as an exporter, Trump’s preferred outcome.

In his tariff games, Trump showed he can be incredibly arbitrary and capricious. He claimed that countries were “ripping us off” because they sell us stuff. There is nothing resembling logic to Trump’s claim. Do Walmart or Costco rip people off when they buy things from those stores?

But it gets worse. He imposed 50 percent tariffs on Brazil’s exports because it prosecuted Trump’s friend for trying to overthrow the government. India also faces 50 percent tariffs on its exports to the U.S. because its prime minister refused to nominate Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize. And Switzerland got hit with a 39 percent tariff because Trump didn’t like the way its president talked.

The rest of the world would likely much rather take its risks with countries like Iran and Libya than rely on getting oil and gas from Donald Trump’s America. At least there is usually some logic to when these countries threaten to reduce output or raise prices.

The rise in oil and gas prices following the closure of the Straits is making clean energy far more competitive than was already the case. Even with oil at $60 a barrel, and natural gas correspondingly cheap, the vast majority of electricity coming on-line across the globe was renewable. This shift will only accelerate, with oil prices up 70 percent and natural gas having close to doubled. While prices may fall back some if the Straits are reopened soon, they are unlikely to return to their pre-war levels for several years in almost any circumstances.

And the price of wind and solar energy continues to fall, driven primarily by low-cost Chinese manufacturers. Chinese electric vehicles will also become hugely more popular as a result of Donald Trump’s war. These cars are already cheaper to purchase than comparable traditional cars, and Trump has just added roughly $500 a year to the operating cost of a gas-burning vehicle. Already 60 percent of the cars sold in China are electric, with EVs holding a comparable share in Europe. The same is the case in many developing countries. The EV share will likely quickly move towards 100 percent thanks to Trump’s war.

It certainly was not the best way to promote a green transition, but no one can deny that Trump’s war is effective. Who knows how much damage the war will ultimately cause in terms of property destruction, the environment, and lives lost. The latter will include both direct effects from the war and likely much larger indirect effects from higher energy and food prices. But one positive outcome is that we will be moving far more rapidly toward a green economy.

Dean Baker is a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research and the author of the 2016 book Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer. Please consider subscribing to his Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Dean Baker.


Bondi Botch: Attorney General's Reveal Clears Jack Smith And Implicates President

Bondi Botch: Attorney General's Reveal Clears Jack Smith And Implicates President

Pam Bondi played the game by her own, illegal rules; and she still managed to completely bungle it.

Last Friday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) shipped to the House Judiciary Committee some documents about the Mar-a-Lago prosecution against Donald Trump led by Special Counsel Jack Smith. Recall that the case was more straightforward than the January 6 prosecution, and by most prosecutors’ assessment, it likely would have resulted in conviction of Trump, but for the 2024 election and the repeated pro-Trump ministrations of Judge Aileen Cannon.

Wait a second. Hasn’t the same Judge Cannon ordered documents from the case to remain sealed and barred from disclosure? And didn’t the DOJ threaten Smith it would prosecute him criminally if he revealed anything about the case in congressional testimony, while refusing to explain what the boundaries of disclosure would be?

Yes. And to be clear, Cannon’s order extends not just to Volume II of the Smith report but also to “any materials that would reveal the substance of Volume II.”

Since the report is an account for the Attorney General of the investigation, a January 13, 2023 memo to the AG laying out the state of the evidence is nothing if not a reveal of part of the substance of that report.

But as part of its campaign to rewrite the history of Trump’s crimes—and in the process discredit Jack Smith, whom Trump continues to smear as “a deranged lunatic” and “political hack”—DOJ made selective disclosures to the House Judiciary Committee of documents, including that January 13 memo. Somebody at 950 Pennsylvania Avenue concluded it would dirty Smith up. That may illustrate the paucity of documents reflecting poorly on the prosecution, which professional prosecutors on both sides of the aisle averred was basically open and shut.

In fact, the memo is replete with demonstrations of Trump’s guilt and Smith’s probity.

Congressman Jamie Raskin, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, seized immediately on the embarrassing revelations. He sent a letter to Bondi on March 24, accusing her of being so consumed by the “frenzied search to find any scrap of evidence” to discredit Smith that she had “quite amazingly, missed the fact that some of the documents you provided include damning evidence about your boss’s conduct and may well violate the gag order your DOJ and Donald Trump demanded from Judge Aileen Cannon.”

Raskin proceeded to call out Bondi’s selective application of the very Cannon order DOJ had argued for. “DOJ appears to view the judicial order as rules for thee—Jack Smith—but not for me,” Raskin wrote. The prosecutors’ own files, he noted, were so damning that even DOJ’s carefully curated production could not fully excise the evidence of what Trump had done.

Here’s what the memo actually revealed about the investigation of Trump for improperly taking sensitive documents from the White House at the end of his presidency and obstructing justice to keep from having to give them back.

  1. One of the documents Trump purloined was so sensitive only six people in the entire federal government could see it. Having spent years as a federal prosecutor and U.S. Attorney, I’ve handled a lot of classified material, and I have never even seen such a close-hold document. The government does not restrict access to six people unless you are dealing with something that can do grave harm to national security. This is the kind of designation reserved for information that, in the wrong hands, could get people killed or destroy critical intelligence operations. That Trump cavalierly included it in his haul was breathtaking.
  2. Trump showed a classified map to friends on his plane. In June 2022, on a flight from Palm Beach to Bedminster, prosecutors identified a classified map chief of staff. No security clearance. No remote basis in law—just, look what I have, isn’t it fun? When Republicans accused Hillary Clinton of accidentally mishandling classified material on a private server, they did cartwheels demanding prosecution. Trump knowingly waved a classified map around a private plane full of political operatives. Same people: not a word.Contrast Trump’s big-shot boastfulness with the potential consequences of his illegal conduct. As Raskin tells Bondi, if the map “is related to our military posture in the Middle East, and it was in fact shown to any foreign official, Saudi or otherwise, that would amount to an unforgivable betrayal of our men and women in uniform who are currently valiantly fighting in President Trump’s disastrous war against Iran.”
  3. The investigation was zeroing in on Trump’s reasons for absconding with national defense information for the most base, and characteristically Trumpian, reason: self-enrichment. The memo makes clear that at this point in the investigation, prosecutors had identified outstanding documents tending to show that Trump selected what he purloined in part because they “would be pertinent to certain business interests.” The prosecution team added, “We must have those documents.”Prosecutors generally don’t have to prove motive, but where they can, it sharpens everything—for the jury, for the public, for history. Watergate became Watergate once we learned that the “third-rate burglary” was undertaken in the service of Nixon’s 1972 reelection campaign.When they wrote the January 2023 memo, prosecutors knew only that the documents Trump retained “would be pertinent to certain business interests”—suggestive, but unnamed.With three years of hindsight, Raskin closes the loop. We now know what “certain business interests” means: LIV Golf, Dar al Arkan, and the $2 billion that flowed from the Saudi sovereign wealth fund into Jared Kushner’s firm within months of Trump leaving office. A month after Trump showed a classified map to passengers on his plane, he was on the golf course with Yasir al-Rumayyan, head of that same Saudi sovereign wealth fund. And Trump had separately brandished to a staffer at Bedminster what he acknowledged was a classified Pentagon plan of attack against Iran—a country whose regional rival was at that very moment positioning itself to pour billions into his family’s business ventures.Raskin’s assessment to Bondi is more than fair; it is urgent: “This glimpse into the trove of evidence behind the cover-up reveals a President of the United States who may have sold out our national security to enrich himself.”
  4. The memo establishes that the classified documents Trump purloined sat commingled with other documents he created after leaving office—a fundamental violation of the protocols governing the handling of national defense information. A 23-year-old Trump aide, now director of Oval Office operations, scanned the contents of one classified box onto her laptop, uploaded the scan to the cloud, and held it for nearly two years before a Trump lawyer retrieved it and flew commercially with a thumb drive containing the material. DOJ redacted what happened next. Nobody knows whether those documents fell into the wrong hands.

And remember, this is the document DOJ thought would damage Smith!

Raskin closes his letter with eight specific questions he asked Bondi to answer by March 31, such as what the classified map depicted and what document Trump stole that was so sensitive only six people in the federal government could see it. He added a demand that “DOJ must cease cherry-picking investigative material and produce all remaining investigative files.”

The response from DOJ and the White House was sadly unsurprising. DOJ took to social media to accuse Raskin of being “blinded by hatred of President Trump,” pronounced the department “the most transparent in history,” and dismissed the letter as “a cheap political stunt, almost as if taking cues from members of the corrupt Jack Smith prosecution team.” The White House called Raskin a Democrat “with zero credibility” who was “clinging to deranged Jack Smith and his lies.”

Notice what’s missing: any denial of the underlying facts. Not a word disputing that the six-person document exists, that Trump showed a classified map on a plane, that the documents pertained to business interests, or that a 23-year-old aide uploaded classified material to the cloud. Bondi and the administration have made name-calling their standard substitution for responses on the merits; it’s the move they reach for every time the facts close in.

Step back and take in the full picture. The Department of Justice has spent the better part of a year threatening Smith with criminal prosecution if he so much as breathed a word derived from Volume II of his report on the Mar-a-Lago documents case. But now DOJ has served up to the House Judiciary Committee hand-picked selections plainly designed to discredit Smith and the prosecution—except it did exactly the opposite. How damning and inculpatory must the rest of the file be?

It is scandalous that Volume II of Smith’s report continues to be hidden from public view, thanks to a lawless decision by Judge Aileen Cannon and the DOJ’s own Trump-serving actions. The question now is whether Bondi responds to Raskin’s letter by March 31, or whether, as her past conduct would indicate, she tries to squirm and stonewall.

We already know the broad strokes of the crimes, and make no mistake, they were crimes. The president knowingly absconded with some of the most sensitive national security secrets in the government’s possession; he stored them pell-mell in a Mar-a-Lago bathroom and ballroom, showing them to political operatives and quite possibly to foreign interests; and he systematically obstructed every lawful effort to recover, including defying a search warrant.

It’s clear that powerful actors, including Cannon, Bondi, and Trump, will pull whatever levers they can, legal or otherwise, to keep Smith’s report buried. Still, as I’ve said before, I think that it’s likely that one way or another, one day or another, the truth will out. If nothing else, copies of the illuminating report will continue to exist after Trump’s reign of terror ends and a responsible government comes into power understanding the paramount public importance of the report.

Until that happens, it falls to us to keep the drumbeat going. What Bondi, Trump, and their allies are counting on is exhaustion and apathy. The flood of outrages, the relentless pace of scandal, the sheer volume of it—they are banking on the public’s losing the thread. Don’t let them. The record of Smith’s investigation into the most serious crimes by a sitting president in our history belongs to the people. That’s not a political position. It’s the price and privilege of self-governance.

Harry Litman is a former United States Attorney and the executive producer and host of the Talking Feds podcast. He has taught law at UCLA, Berkeley, and Georgetown and served as a deputy assistant attorney general in the Clinton Administration. Please consider subscribing to Talking Feds on Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Talking Feds.

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