Here is the FBI's Epstein List
We still don't know what the FBI did to investigate these allegations
Contrary to what the FBI and DOJ have said over the past year, it turns out there really is an FBI list of other people suspected of possible wrongdoing in connection with Jeffrey Epstein.
President Trump, who has denied any involvement with Epstein’s crimes, is on that list, as well as a number of other powerful people.
By the way, one of the documents that outlines the DOJ investigation into “potential co-conspirators of Jeffrey Epstein” — the DOJ’s 86-page prosecution memo — mysteriously disappeared from the Government’s website this week after we asked the DOJ about it. (Don’t worry, we downloaded it — it is attached in a PDF lower in this post). Here is the top of it:
The drip drip of revelations from the Epstein files, including those mentioning the President and those in his inner circle — as we report in the Miami Herald today — still seems to have done little to shake the U.S. government, or the electorate. No one has resigned, been asked to resign or has demanded a new investigation.
The President still thinks this whole thing is a hoax.
Meanwhile across the Pond, Prince Andrew was stripped of his royal titles, the ambassador to Washington was fired, and the scandal threatens to topple the British Prime Minister.
In some ways, Britain seems to be taking the Epstein case more seriously than in our own country.
DOJ officials have said that there was no credible evidence to pursue or to charge any of the men accused by Epstein survivors. It’s fair to consider that there was not enough to charge one or more of these men. Perhaps there was insufficient evidence to charge any of the 11 on this list that was part of this Government report.
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