Politics Events Country 2026-03-07T17:02:30+00:00

New Trump Accusations in Epstein Case

Democrats accuse the Trump administration of hiding Epstein case documents. The release of FBI transcripts again involves the president in a scandal related to a sex exploitation network amidst escalating tensions with Iran.


New Trump Accusations in Epstein Case

In times of crisis or political scandals, U.S. foreign policy usually hides these revelations: the new accusations linked to Epstein's sex exploitation network and the power plot that connects sectors of the U.S. economic, political, and judicial elites. Democratic lawmakers accused the Trump administration of trying to hide sensitive information from the Epstein file that could affect the president. The documents include transcripts of interviews conducted by the FBI with a witness who claimed to have been sexually abused by Epstein as a teenager and also suffered assaults from Trump when she was between 13 and 15 years old. According to the transcript, the young woman recounted that Epstein took her to New York or New Jersey and there introduced her to the then-businessman. However, the president has maintained that he broke ties with the financier before he was convicted in Florida in 2008 for sexual offenses. A House committee decided to summon Attorney General Pam Bondi to explain the Department of Justice's handling of these files. The relationship between Trump and Epstein has been documented in photographs and social records from the 1990s and early 2000s, when both frequented power circles and high-society events. According to the Department of Justice, the lack of prior publication of the FBI interviews was an oversight. The U.S. Department of Justice this week published nearly 50 pages that had not been previously released from the federal investigation into Epstein. The recent publication of new documents from the case of financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein again splashes the President of the United States, Donald Trump, in an international context marked by the military escalation of Washington against Iran. After reporting on this, we reviewed the entire batch with the same coding and found that 15 documents were incorrectly coded as duplicates. Additionally, the Southern District of Florida separately determined that five prosecution memoranda, initially marked as privileged, could be published without losing the protection of privileged materials. She also stated that for years she had received telephone threats to keep silent about what happened. The interviews were conducted by the FBI in 2019 as part of the investigation into the sex exploitation network linked to Epstein. Until now, the Department of Justice had only published a partial summary of those statements. At that meeting, the witness stated that Trump tried to force her to perform oral sex on him and that she defended herself by biting him. These 20 documents are currently in the library, in dataset 12. The appearance of these revelations not only reopens a scandal involving the U.S. political and economic elites but also coincides with a juncture when the White House is trying to focus public attention on geopolitical confrontation. To date, there is no criminal conviction against Trump in relation to the case. The appearance of these documents occurs in parallel with the increase in tensions between the United States and Iran, following recent bombings driven by Washington and Israel. As we have consistently done, if any member of the public reported… https://t.co/y7snlxbT0K — DOJ Rapid Response (@DOJRR47) March 5, 2026 Accusations of Cover-up The case again strains U.S. internal politics. As we have systematically done, if any citizen raised any concerns about the library's information, the Department would review it, make the necessary corrections, and republish it online. After a thorough review, we found that a published Form 302 (which was also released in a published spreadsheet) had subsequent Forms 302 coded as 'duplicates'. We will also make all documents coded as duplicates available to Congress members in an unredacted form for them to review in the Congressional Reading Room. As we said a week ago, the Department of Justice reviewed public allegations that 302 documents originally produced to Ghislaine Maxwell in discovery of her criminal case were missing from the EFTA library. The agency explained that the full transcripts had not been released before because they had been 'mistakenly' marked as duplicate documents. Translation of the U.S. Department of Justice statement. The 'surprise' was that nearly 50 pages of Epstein's files were missing: 'As we said a week ago, the Department of Justice reviewed public allegations that 302 documents originally produced to Ghislaine Maxwell during the discovery of her criminal case were missing from the EFTA library.' The testimony corresponds to a young woman between 13 and 15 years old.