DOJ ‘Kills’ Viral FBI File On Rape Charge From Library, Then Warns…
A fresh release of Jeffrey Epstein documents has reignited scrutiny around President Donald Trump — but also triggered an unusually forceful response from the Justice Department. Newly disclosed FBI records detail a pre-election phone call alleging sexual assault involving Trump and Epstein, claims the DOJ says are “unfounded and false.” Within hours of the documents becoming public, the FBI file containing the allegation was quietly removed from the DOJ’s Epstein database. At the same time, internal Justice Department emails revealed that Trump flew on Epstein’s private jet more times than previously known — information prosecutors described as “situational awareness,” not evidence of wrongdoing. As nearly 30,000 pages of Epstein-related files flood the public domain, the case underscores a familiar tension in Washington: transparency versus proof, allegation versus evidence — and why some names continue to dominate the fallout from Epstein’s shadowy past.
