Prince
William's firm stance on dealing with the disgraced former Andrew
Mountbatten-Windsor has been revealed, 6 years before he was finally
exiled from public life by King Charles, and his reaction to that
Newsnight interview.
The interview proved
disastrous, not only for Andrew, whose reputation lay in ruins, but for
the monarchy as a whole. Suddenly, the palace found itself engaged in a
full-scale crisis, with mounting questions over its relevance in a
modern world, even its survival.
In
the wake of the broadcast, William contacted his father to urge him and
the Queen to take swift action, concerned not only about the public
response but for his own future. It comes as ex-Prince Andrew's final
act that 'terminally killed' his relationship with William and Kate.
The
Daily Mirror's royal editor, Russell Myers, reveals in his new book,
William and Catherine: The Intimate Inside Story, what took place among
the Royal Family.
He said, "The interview was a
disaster, not only for Andrew, whose reputation was in tatters, but for
the monarchy at large. Suddenly, the palace was engaged in a full-scale
firefight, with deepening questions over its relevance in a modern
world, even its survival.
Andrew
Mountbatten-Windsor should have his succession rights revoked so that
he is no longer in line to the throne, a York MP has said.
The
former Duke of York gave up his royal titles following accusations
about his links with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein,
although he has consistently denied any wrongdoing.
Rachael
Maskell, Labour MP for York Central, told the BBC that "time and time
again, we have seen that Andrew has been conservative with the truth",
and said his position as Counsellor of State should also be removed.
"All
of these titles and positions need to be addressed, so we are just left
with Andrew the citizen, and a citizen that is fully accountable," she
said.
Despite
the heavy redactions in the Epstein files released by the Department of
Justice under the Trump administration, a series of emails has been
made public, which allegedly show the Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson,
contacting the convicted offender.
It was
revealed that the British Royal appealed to Jeffrey Epstein for
employment during a period of serious financial difficulty. The emails
are just a tiny part of the massive release that includes 3 million
files of documents, images, and videos related to the late financier’s
criminal network and personal communications.
According
to reports published by The Mirror US, the emails date back to 2010,
where Sarah Ferguson appeared asking Epstein to hire her as a house
assistant, while referring to a man named Andrew, who is presumed to be
her ex-husband, who repeatedly appeared in the Epstein files.
“But
why I don’t understand, don’t you just get me to be your House
Assistant. I am the most capable and desperately need the money. Please
Jeffrey think about it. Also had David Stern down for tea yesterday with
Andrew he has an update for you.” Ferguson wrote.
The
email was sent to Epstein when he was under house arrest in Florida
after being convicted of procuring a minor for pr–titution. So far, the
message sent by a woman identified as Sarah is presumed to be none other
than the Duchess of York, based on the other names mentioned in the
mail, like Andrew and David Stern.
Sarah is a liar and no one ever needs to forget that or pretend otherwise.
Staying with Homeland Security, THE NEW YORK TIMES notes, "The Department of Homeland Security’s funding has lapsed and lawmakers
are deadlocked over a proposal to restore it, with Democrats seeking
restrictions on the federal agents carrying out President Trump’s
immigration crackdown." Brittney Melton (NPR) adds, "The agency shut down after lawmakers failed to meet a Friday deadline to
fund DHS and its workforce of over 260,000 people. The funding lapse
points to a greater issue: Congress's consistent failure to do its job
on time." Sahil Kapur, Scott Wong, Julie Tsirkin and Frank Thorp V (NBC NEWS) explain
that the Democrats and the White House continue to debate what's needed
before funding can be approved, "The two sides have continued to trade
offers, signaling some hope for an agreement. But it remains unclear
which Democratic demands the White House will agree to and Congress left
Washington on Thursday without a deal.
ED
O'KEEFE: We turn now to House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who
joins us this morning from New York City. Leader Jeffries, thank you for
being here.
DEMOCRATIC LEADER HAKEEM JEFFRIES: Good morning. Great to be with you.
ED
O'KEEFE: So as this shutdown continues, I want to remind our viewers
what it is, exactly, congressional Democrats are seeking to reopen the
Department of Homeland Security. You want immigration agents to show
IDs, to wear body cameras, take off their masks, stop racial profiling
and seek judicial warrants to enter private property. Talks between the
White House and congressional Democrats are continuing. Are you willing
to compromise, to let any of these go, to get the government reopened?
REP.
JEFFRIES: Well, our value proposition is simple, taxpayer dollars
should be used to make life more affordable for the American people, not
brutalize or kill them, as we horrifically saw in Minneapolis with the
cold blooded killings of Rene Nicole Good and Alex Pretti. We know, and
the American people clearly know, that ICE is totally out of control and
they need to be reined in. Because the American people deserve
immigration enforcement that is fair, that is just, and that is humane.
And so, we need dramatic change at ICE, including, but not limited to,
the types of things that you laid out before any DHS funding bill moves
forward.
ED O'KEEFE: With the
exception of some flexibility on body cameras, because they're starting
to spend some money to get those out there, some Republicans have
rejected this list of policy reform proposals. You guys still seem miles
apart. So when, conceivably, will we see this resolved? And again, I
ask you, if- are there any of these points that you're willing to let go
in order to get the government reopened?
REP.
JEFFRIES: Well, we're willing to have a good faith conversation about
everything, but fundamentally we need change that is dramatic, that is
bold, that is meaningful and that is transformational. And these are
common sense things. For instance, judicial warrants should be required
before ICE agents can storm private property or rip everyday Americans
out of their homes. We need to make sure that there are actual
independent investigations, so that if state and local laws are
violated, in many cases, violently violated, that state and local
authorities have the ability to criminally investigate and criminally
prosecute anyone who has violated the law. Because we cannot trust
Kristi Noem or Pam Bondi to conduct an independent investigation. We
believe that sensitive locations should be off limits, sensitive
locations like houses of worship, schools, hospitals or polling sites,
and that fundamentally ICE should be targeting violent felons who are
here unlawfully, as opposed to violently targeting law abiding immigrant
families, which is completely inconsistent with what Donald Trump
promised the American people he would do.
ED O'KEEFE: Right. And we, of course, this past week reported that
about 14% of those detained had violent criminal records. About 60% of
them were wanted on criminal records overall. But it was that 14%,
violent criminals. Again, I just- it sounds like this is going to go on a
while, because Tom Homan wasn't terribly flexible on anything,
especially on the issue of warrants and masks. You're not ceding any
ground. So there's a few things coming up here. For example, State of
the Union is scheduled for a week from Tuesday. Should it be held if the
Department of Homeland Security is shut down?
REP. JEFFRIES: Well, we'll cross that bridge when we get to it. It is certainly my hope--
ED O'KEEFE: --Sounds like you're going to get to it, though. I mean--
REP. JEFFRIES:--we can come to a resolution in advance of it. Well,
here's the thing, the administration and Republicans have made a clear
decision that they would rather shut down FEMA, shut down the Coast
Guard and shut down TSA, than enact the type of dramatic reforms
necessary so that ICE and other DHS law enforcement agencies are
conducting themselves like every other law enforcement professional in
the country. For instance, police officers don't use masks. County
Sheriffs don't use masks. State troopers don't use masks. Why is it that
ICE agents who are untrained, are being unleashed on American
communities with this type of lawlessness, violence and brutality.
Unacceptable, unconscionable, and it's un-American.
When an
immigration agent shot Julio C. Sosa-Celis in the leg last month in
Minneapolis, touching off hours of tense protests, the Trump
administration rushed to sell a version of events that demonized the
wounded man and defended the agent.
About
two hours after the gunfire, a Department of Homeland Security
spokeswoman claimed that three people had attacked an agent with a broom
and snow shovel. She said the agent “fired a defensive shot to defend
his life” as he was “being ambushed.” The next day, Kristi Noem, the
homeland security secretary, accused the men of trying to kill the
agent.
But the federal government’s account soon shifted. And by Friday, it had fully unraveled.
When
assault charges were filed days after the shooting against Mr.
Sosa-Celis and one of the other men, Alfredo A. Aljorna, officials
changed their narrative, saying it was not three people who attacked the
agent, but two. Several other details revealed in court records also
differed from the original account.
Then
on Thursday, the top federal prosecutor in Minnesota asked a judge to
drop the case, saying that “newly discovered evidence in this matter is
materially inconsistent with the allegations.” On Friday, the acting
director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Todd Lyons, said two
agents had been placed on leave for providing accounts that appeared to
conflict with video footage of what happened. Those agents, he said,
could eventually face termination and prosecution.
[. . .]
The
collapse of the government’s narrative, which came just as the
administration was ending its more than two-month surge of immigration
agents to Minnesota, was the latest instance of the Department of
Homeland Security providing an account of a shooting that later proved
questionable or outright wrong. For many, especially those already
skeptical of the Trump administration’s deportation agenda, the repeated
emergence of evidence that undermines official accounts has cast doubt
on almost anything the government says about immigration enforcement.
This is absolutely egregious. Two men were accosted by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and one took a bullet to the
leg. Then the federal government called them murderers and hit them
with heavy charges, all for ICE’s own head to admit that his agents
appear to have been lying under oath—a crime that this administration doesn’t seem to take very seriously.
This
shooting happened one week after Renee Good was killed, and just over a
week before Alex Pretti was killed. The Trump administration lied to us
about both of those events, as well. Only time will tell just how many more of these ICE shootings were offensive rather than defensive.
On HBO's LAST WEEK TONIGHT WITH JOHN OLIVER last night, John addressed the lies of Homeland Security.
Students in more than three dozen states
have walked out of class to protest the Trump administration’s
deportation tactics in recent weeks, a wave of defiant demonstrations
that continues as some officials have vowed to crack down.
Teenagers
in Utah carried backpacks and bullhorns as they walked out of eight
schools in Salt Lake County. In Maine, students in mittens convened on a
bridge over the Kennebec River. Scores of students were seen stopping highway traffic
in Maryland. Classmates at a high school in Sunnyside, Wash., lined a
parking lot carrying hand-drawn posters. “We are skipping our lesson to
teach you one,” read one.
But in Texas, where more than half of all
public school students are Hispanic, Republican leaders have tried
teaching a very different lesson of their own, threatening students,
teachers and school districts with severe consequences for taking part
in demonstrations.
Gov. Greg Abbott of
Texas has suggested that state funding could be stripped from school
districts and that students who are disorderly during protests should be
arrested. The Texas Education Agency has warned that districts found to
have facilitated walkouts could be taken over by the state.
“Schools and staff who allow this behavior should be treated as co-conspirators,” Mr. Abbott said in a social media post last week, which focused on one walkout in Kyle, Texas, outside of Austin.
Yet
despite the threats from state officials — and the pleas to students
from many school administrators — the protests over immigration
enforcement did not stop.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott threatening to take away state funding from
high schools with students who participate in protests is a restriction
of the First Amendment.
In response to high school students protesting Immigration and
Customs Enforcement on Jan. 30, Abbott argued walkouts are disruptive
and lead to criminal chaos, and the schools allowing this behavior
should be treated as co-conspirators.
But what is so criminal about student walkouts?
This type of political demonstration has been conducted by students
since 1766. The Great Butter Rebellion at Harvard University, where
students protested poor food quality, is considered the first student
protest in the United States.
As Seguin High sophomore Janelle walked to the corner of Silo and
Eden roads in Arlington, a green shirt with a Mexican flag stitched on
the back draped over her shoulders.
Worry, anger and fear all washed over her as she stood next to
classmates and wondered what the consequences would be for walking out
of school to protest recent deportations and deadly shootings related to
immigration enforcement. Then she remembered her grandmother, who
inspired her to attend Thursday’s protest in the first place.
“She came here as an immigrant,” Janelle said. “So I feel like I
should be out here and show her that I can do it, and I can protect
people.”
Janelle was one of many in Arlington and Mansfield who participated
in walkouts this week to protest against the U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement.
Caitlin Leggett (KTXS) reports, "Students from Abilene High School walked out of class and marched to
Abilene City Hall around noon Thursday, staging a student-led protest
centered on concerns about immigration enforcement and what they
described as recent actions by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement." KTAB/KRBC offer a photo essay here. CNN notes, "More than 100 Dripping Springs High School students walked out of
class and marched Tuesday to protest Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, but some participants left the demonstration with traffic
citations. Students carried signs and chanted as they left campus.
One student, asked what they decided to put on their sign, said, 'We
are skipping our lessons to teach you one. ICE out'." Jacob Daniels (KRISTV) adds, "Students at multiple Corpus Christi Independent School District campuses
walked out of classes Thursday afternoon, carrying signs and chanting
in what many described as a powerful statement. The demonstration
sparked debate among community members about student safety and
supervision during the protest." Arthur Clayborn (KLTV) notes, "Kilgore High School students walked out
of classes Thursday morning to protest deportations by Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, or ICE, with organizers saying recent family
separations in their community motivated the demonstration. Student
organizer Kemuel Ondinyo said he was inspired to act after watching
similar protests at other Texas schools and witnessing deportations
affecting people in his community." Bianca Seward (HOUSTON PUBLIC MEDIA) notes,
"More than 50 students from the Houston Academy for International
Studies walked out of school Tuesday protesting Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) operations in the United States. The protest, which
students said they started planning last week, started just after noon.
While chanting 'ICE off our streets, ICE off our streets,' several
students said they were there to call attention to the treatment of
immigrants under the Trump administration."
And on Friday, walk outs continued. Priscilla Rice (KERA) reports,
"Young North Texans continue to protest the federal government’s
anti-immigration policies by walking out of class. More than 200
students walked out of Grand Prairie High School just after 11 a.m. on
Friday. Students told KERA stronger U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement measures have affected not only their community, but
communities nationwide." WBAP notes, "Several dozen students walked out of the Dallas Uplift Williams
Prepatory School Friday morning, hiking into Dallas to protest ICE
immigration activities at the American Airlines Center. Waving flags
from several nations, students say they are protesting immigration and
other federal agent violence, illegal arrests, and illegal deportations
of their teachers and neighbors who have been here for years." Daniel Perreault (KVUE) adds,
"Students at multiple Austin ISD schools walked out of class during the
school day once again on Friday to protest. Students from three Austin
high schools walked out around 1:30 p.m. and then marched to Austin
City Hall." And Matt Mitchell (HOODLINE) notes,
"More than a hundred McNeil High School students walked out of class in
Round Rock on Friday afternoon, marching off campus to the corner of
McNeil Drive and Parmer Lane to protest recent actions by U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The midday demonstration kicked off
shortly after 2 p.m., part of a wave of student-led protests that has
rolled across Central Texas since late January."
On Friday thousands of high school students walked out of Los
Angeles-area schools to protest ICE’s Gestapo tactics, participating in
another national “day of action.” Those who gathered outside the federal
jail in downtown Los Angeles heroically stood up against an attack with
gas and batons by federal agents.
Helicopter video by local television stations show demonstrators
standing their ground near the U.S. Metropolitan Detention Center, many
obviously teenagers, some shoving back and throwing objects at the
federal thugs in self-defense.
[. . .]
In a related retaliatory action, Ricardo Lopez, a history teacher at the
Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Charter Synergy Quantum
Academy in South Los Angeles, was fired for opening a locked gate to
allow students, who were then risking injury by climbing over gates and
fences, to join the walkout, a move school administrators labeled
insubordination. Already almost a thousand signatures have been
collected demanding Lopez’s reinstatement. To date the United Teachers
of Los Angeles (UTLA) bureaucracy has issued no statement in support of
the victimized teacher.
A group of singers gathered in downtown Indianapolis Sunday night to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The demonstration, which was organized by Indy Singing Resistance,
was held at Monument Circle at 6 p.m. Instead of chanting, protestors
used their signing voices to express themselves.
In a release sent ahead of the protest, Singing Resistance indicated
that a small group of people would lead all who show up for the event.
Those leaders taught demonstrators the songs they planned to sing during
the protest upon their arrival at the event. No singing experience was
required for protest attendees.
In Tennessee, WCYB reports, "Despite rainy conditions,
protesters took to the streets in Johnson City on today to rally against
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations in the region,
saying they are concerned about what they describe as an increased ICE
presence spreading across Northeast Tennessee. Community members
gathered holding signs and chanting, saying they would not stay silent
against what they described as growing enforcement efforts by ICE.
Pandora Burns a protestor said, 'I mean they don't stop deporting people
in the rain either so'."
Meanwhile unhinged Pam Bondi sent out a letter on Saturday announcing that all the Epstein files had been released.
The Epstein Class. A group Chump's protecting. His friends.
Remember the ones that would be hurt by the release of the Epstein
files? He yelled that at Marjorie Taylor Greene, remember? Christopher Lamb (CNN) reports:
Steve Bannon, a former White House adviser to US President Donald Trump,
discussed opposition strategies with convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein against Pope Francis, with Bannon saying he hoped to “take down”
the pontiff, according to newly released files from the US Department
of Justice.
Messages
sent between the pair in 2019, released in the massive document dump
last month, reveal Bannon courted the late financier in his attempts to
undermine the former pontiff after leaving the first Trump
administration.
Bannon
had been highly critical of Francis whom he saw as an opponent to his
“sovereigntist” vision, a brand of nationalist populism which swept
through Europe in 2018 and 2019. The released documents from the DOJ
appear to show that Epstein had been helping Bannon to build his movement.
“Will take down (Pope) Francis,” Bannon wrote to Epstein in June 2019. “The Clintons, Xi, Francis, EU – come on brother.”
Pope
Francis was the people's pope so it's only natural that a disgusting
creep like Steve Bannon would want to take him "down." The Epstein
Class is being made uncomfortable and a few are having to find the exit
door. Claire Zillman (FORBES) notes:
On Thursday, Goldman Sachs said general counsel Kathryn Ruemmler will leave the bank
in June after the documents showed she stayed in close contact with
Epstein until 2019, at one point calling him “Uncle Jeffrey” as she
thanked him for high-end gifts. And on Friday, Dubai-based logistics
group DP World named a new chair and new CEO, signaling the departure of Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem
whose emails with Epstein included references to sexual experiences.
Both ousters followed earlier resignations in the U.K. public sector,
namely those of former U.S. ambassador Peter Mandelson from the House of Lords and Morgan McSweeney, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff who’d advised on Mandelson’s appointment.
Following an exodus of talent who have left the Wasserman Group talent agency after emails between founder Casey Wasserman and Jeffrey Epstein associate
Ghislaine Maxwell were revealed in the Justice Department's latest
tranche of documents, pressure for the founder to step down came to a
boiling point. On Friday, Wasserman announced that he was selling the
company as he had become a "distraction" to the business he founded 24
years ago.
The latest releases also placed a shadow over the previous accounts
given by allies of President Trump — from Commerce Secretary Howard
Lutnick to Elon Musk — regarding their dealings with Epstein.
There
is no suggestion of criminality around either Lutnick or Musk, but the
latest batch of emails contradicted Lutnick’s earlier assertions of when
he had cut off contact with Epstein and called into question Musk’s
previously emphatic insistence that he “refused” to visit the disgraced
financier’s Caribbean island.
In
one newly released email, the entrepreneur asks Epstein which day or
night might feature the wildest party on the island. It’s unclear if
Musk actually visited.
Beyond all of that, there is the broader fear and anger raised by the nature of the Epstein story.
Specifically,
it stokes the sense of a wealthy and powerful elite hovering above the
rest of society, forming a chummy circle of mutual protection, and
remaining out of reach of the laws and ethical standards to which
everyone else is subject.
At
a time when anti-elitist populism is already one of the strongest
animating political forces in the United States — and in many other
parts of the world — the Epstein story is rocket fuel.
A
Donald Trump insider has been revealed to have been in "regular
contact" with the late child sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein, including in
one email that says "miss u," according to the latest DOJ release.
CBS
News reported on the Epstein files release on Saturday in an article
called, "Trump insider Tom Barrack kept in regular contact with Jeffrey
Epstein for years, files show." Barrack is also an administration
ambassador to Turkey.
"President
Trump's longtime confidant Thomas Barrack, now serving as U.S.
ambassador to Turkey and special envoy to Syria, was in regular, close
contact with Jeffrey Epstein for years after Epstein's 2008 conviction
for soliciting a minor, a CBS News analysis of over 100 texts and email
exchanges from the newly released Justice Department documents shows,"
according to CBS.
The
outlet further reported, "The correspondence places Barrack, a
globe-trotting billionaire, among a circle of wealthy and influential
figures who maintained social contact with Epstein even as his criminal
history became widely known. Their relationship continued even after
Barrack became a prolific fundraiser for Mr. Trump's 2016 campaign, and
later, led his inaugural committee and became a frequent presence in the
White House."
According to an FBI document released by the DOJ, the agency received a tip
in June of 2021 from an individual whose name has been redacted, but is
described as an alleged “victim,” a former member of the Sinaloa Cartel, and a close confidant of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
According
to the document, the individual was formally interviewed by an FBI
agent, and accused Trump of being aware of and having funded “underage
sex parties at the Donald Trump Golf course.”
That
individual went on to claim that they had “recordings of Trump, Epstein
and Maxwell discussing marketing strategies for high profile sex
parties,” according to the FBI official who drafted the document, their
name also redacted. The individual claimed that in one of the
recordings, Trump can be heard stating “he was aware of the underage sex
parties.”
Let's wind down with this from Senator Alex Padilla's office:
Padilla and Wyden sound alarm that IRS errors improperly exposed private taxpayer information to ICE
WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senators Alex Padilla
(D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Immigration
Subcommittee, and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Ranking Member of the Senate
Finance Committee, demanded answers and accountability from the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) after the agency admitted in a court filing that
the flawed system it adopted to transfer people’s home addresses to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) potentially led to thousands
of records being shared improperly in violation of taxpayer privacy
laws. In a new letter
to Acting IRS Commissioner Scott Bessent and Homeland Security
Secretary Kristi Noem, the Senators also raised grave concerns that the
automated system the Trump Administration created to transfer taxpayer
data to ICE may have misidentified a large but unknown number of
taxpayers — possibly including American citizens — in response to ICE
inquiries, potentially exposing them to immigration enforcement actions
at a time when serious questions are being raised about how such actions
are being carried out.
“The IRS failed to properly verify that the information it disclosed
to ICE belonged to the correct taxpayers. Instead, it used a faulty,
automated verification system to identify the taxpayers whose
information it thought it could disclose under the terms of the agency’s
data-sharing agreement, which it reached last year with the Department
of Homeland Security,” wrote the Senators. “… The IRS
now admits that this system led to exactly the kinds of grave mistakes
our taxpayer privacy laws were designed to prevent, and that Congress as
well as IRS employees previously warned could happen under this
data-sharing agreement.”
Senators Padilla, Wyden, and additional Senate Democrats warned early last year that the data-sharing agreement between the IRS and ICE would result in serious errors and violate taxpayer privacy. They demanded details about the status and potential misuse of the data sharing program as recently as January 30 of this year.
“The risk to innocent people was entirely predictable once
taxpayer data was used for immigration enforcement,” continued the
Senators.
“Because the administration ignored the warnings, we now face the
extraordinarily troubling likelihood that in some significant, unknown
number of cases, the IRS not only provided return information to ICE in
violation of strict taxpayer privacy laws, but it also provided
information about the wrong taxpayers. Those individuals may have been
injured by ICE, improperly detained or imprisoned, or improperly
deported.”
In their letter, the Senators called for explanations of exactly how
many taxpayer records were shared improperly, who was responsible and
what accountability measures will be taken, whether anyone has been
wrongly detained or deported based on shared data, and what steps the
Trump Administration is taking to notify taxpayers whose information was
improperly disclosed. The letter was also signed by Senators Catherine
Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Angus King (I-Maine), Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Adam
Schiff (D-Calif.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Peter Welch (D-Vt.).
Last spring, Senators Padilla, Wyden, and Cortez Masto condemned the IRS’
plan to provide sensitive taxpayer information to the Department of
Homeland Security to locate suspected undocumented immigrants. The
Senators also led a March 2025 letter to IRS and DHS leadership raising the alarm on reports that DHS and the Department of Government Efficiency illegally requested sensitive taxpayer information from the IRS.
Full text of today’s letter is available here and below:
Dear Acting Commissioner Bessent and Secretary Noem:
We write with alarm following up on our January 29, 2026, letter
to Acting Commissioner Bessent regarding the IRS’s disclosure of 47,289
taxpayers’ return information (including “last known addresses”) to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials. Validating our
fears expressed in that letter, an IRS court filing made on February 11,
2026, confirms that thousands of these disclosures may have been
improper.
The government has argued that it was permitted to disclose tax
return information with respect to specific taxpayers who were under
active investigation by ICE. That premise is subject to litigation, and
ICE’s initial claim that it had more than a million active
investigations underway is absurd. Furthermore, the IRS failed to
properly verify that the information it disclosed to ICE belonged to the
correct taxpayers. Instead, it used a faulty, automated verification
system to identify the taxpayers whose information it thought it could
disclose under the terms of the agency’s data-sharing agreement, which
it reached last year with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
This agreement was signed by Secretaries Bessent and Noem. The IRS now
admits that this system led to exactly the kinds of grave mistakes our
taxpayer privacy laws were designed to prevent, and that Congress as
well as IRS employees previously warned could happen under this
data-sharing agreement.
Because it is common for multiple taxpayers to have similar or
identical names and because not all ethnic groups follow the same naming
conventions, the IRS needs more than an individual’s first and last
name to ensure it does not disclose information about the wrong taxpayer
in violation of Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 6103.
In its recent court filing, the IRS admits it provided return
information, including the taxpayers’ “last known addresses” (which may
be current addresses unknown to ICE), even in many cases where ICE’s
request for taxpayer information included a name but not a complete or
accurate address.
As an example, if ICE requested the last known address of “John
Doe” at “Unknown Address, 99999” the IRS’s automated system would
disclose the last known address for a person named John Doe to ICE. This
is because the IRS system only looked to see if the address field in
ICE requests was or was not populated, not whether it was populated with
an address that matched IRS records.
The IRS estimates that up to five percent of its 47,289
disclosures to ICE may have involved insufficient address data. In other
words, thousands of taxpayers’ information may have been disclosed in
violation of section 6103, including those who are not targets of
immigration investigations.
The risk to innocent people was entirely predictable once
taxpayer data was used for immigration enforcement. Because the
administration ignored the warnings, we now face the extraordinarily
troubling likelihood that in some significant, unknown number of cases,
the IRS not only provided return information to ICE in violation of
strict taxpayer privacy laws, but it also provided information about the
wrong taxpayers. Those individuals may have been injured by ICE,
improperly detained or imprisoned, or improperly deported.
That would be an unimaginable nightmare for those wrongly
targeted people and their families. Conditions in ICE facilities are
horrific, and 32 people died in ICE custody last year, meeting the
record last reached in 2004, and another 8 have died this year alone.
The Trump administration has deported people to foreign torture prisons,
third countries they have no ties to, or back to their home countries,
despite having pending asylum claims. Exposing people to such risk
because of an improper sharing of tax information is unconscionable.
As noted in our prior letter, penalties for 6103 violations are
severe. IRC section 7213 requires responsible employees to be
terminated, and IRC section 7431 allows a taxpayer to bring a civil
lawsuit for damages.
Injured taxpayers will not know they can sue until the government
informs them of their rights. The government is required by section
7431 to inform the victims when a person is criminally charged with a
violation of section 6103 or when the IRS proposes an adverse action
against an employee.
Accordingly, please respond no later than March 15 to the following questions:
1. Exactly how many taxpayers’ return information was disclosed
in circumstances that the IRS now considers improper or potentially
improper?
a. How and when did you find out about the inappropriate disclosures?
b. Who at the IRS first became aware that the inappropriate disclosures were made?
2. Which officials are responsible for approving, executing, and
supervising the disclosures now considered to be improper or potentially
improper?
3. Has any IRS or DHS employee been investigated, charged,
disciplined, placed on administrative leave, or otherwise held
accountable in connection with any improper disclosures?
a. If not, explain why not.
b. If so, please identify the employee and describe the accountability measure taken.
4. Have DHS or ICE accessed, reviewed, relied upon, copied, or
further disseminated the affected data before remediation efforts began?
5. What specific steps have DHS or ICE taken to prevent further disclosure or dissemination of the data?
6. What specific steps are DHS and ICE taking to dispose of data improperly disclosed by the IRS?
7. Have any of the 47,289 taxpayers whose information the IRS provided to ICE been questioned, arrested, detained, or deported?
a. If so, how many are among the subset of individuals whose information the IRS shared improperly with ICE?
b. What steps are the IRS and DHS taking to make this determination?
c. What plan has the IRS and DHS put in place to remedy any detainments or deportations made in error?
8. Have any affected taxpayers been notified that their information has been improperly disclosed?
a. If not, when will the notification occur?
b. If the IRS has concluded that such notice is not required, provide the legal basis for that determination.
We look forward to your prompt and complete response.
Con artist Pam Bondi. Our attorney general who thinks she is actually Donald Chump's personal attorney. Klaus Marre (WhoWhatWhy) reports:
If
we had to make a list of Trump administration officials who need to
face accountability for their roles in trying to turn the United States
into a lawless, authoritarian state, it would contain dozens of names.
That of Attorney General Pam Bondi would not be far from the top for
violating her oath of office and besmirching the Constitution.
And
we hope that a future administration, one that is actually interested
in the rule of law and in dissuading the next generations of fascists
from betraying the nation’s ideals, will force her to stand trial (and
hopefully send her to prison) for her misdeeds.
However,
if future prosecutors are looking for a particularly low-hanging fruit,
then we want to direct their attention to Bondi’s embarrassing
appearance before the House Judiciary Committee.
Fortunately
for her, making a fool of herself, hurling prepared insults at
lawmakers instead of answering questions, and refusing to acknowledge
the victims of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell aren’t crimes (and
they shouldn’t be).
Perjury, however, is.
And
it is quite clear that Bondi, like so many other Trump administration
officials who appeared before Congress, lied under oath.
In
an exchange with Rep. Deborah Ross (D-NC), the attorney general said
that Maxwell “was not transferred to a lower-level facility.”
Now,
while most Trump administration officials probably can’t tell the truth
from a lie anymore, they need to choose their words more carefully when
they are testifying before Congress than, for example, when they invent
figures to butter up the boss during a cabinet meeting or when they
appear on Fox News.
Bondi may wish she had… because her claim regarding Maxwell is demonstrably false.
After
Epstein’s confidante met with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and
told him what he wanted to hear (instead of pleading the Fifth, which is
what she did on Tuesday when faced with a less sympathetic crowd), she
was moved from FCI Tallahassee to FBC Bryan in Texas.
According
to its website, the former is a “low security federal correctional
institution,” while the latter is a “minimum security federal prison
camp.”
According to the Bureau of Prisons, that’s not the same thing.
In
fact, its website makes it quite clear that a “minimum security” prison
is a lower-level facility than a “low security” prison.
She lied. She committed perjury while testifying to the House Judiciary Committee.
She needs to face real and true consequences.
She is supposed to represent justice and she didn't. She lied. Flat out lied. Like the con artist that she truly is.
Some comments on the article:
salvatore koose
2 hours ago
Uh
oh, perjury. That's funny. She'll claim it is semantics but like the
author showed. Going from a double fence perimeter to zero fence. That
seems to be a lower level of security, but who knows I'm no lawyer or
security expert.
Nothing will
happen now. The new standard of any administration will likely be
blanket pardons upon exit of their president from office. Both sides
will do this lawfare thing into the future.
B Rowe
15 hours ago
Bondi
lied and then refused to apologize to the victims standing behind her
for including personal information about them in the Epstein files. This
was a terrible performance for our chief law enforcement officer, and
she should resign.
W B
14 hours ago
The
fact that the Chairman (Jordan) allowed Bondi to run amok, not answer
questions, and outright insult sitting members of congress during this
hearing shows what a worthless chairman Jordan is and how complicit
Jordan and most of the GOP are with the attempt to cover up the Epstein
sexual crimes against minors.
Thank you, Senator Massie, for being a lone sane voice among your GOP peers.
James Berendsen
16 hours ago
Bondi
has shown herself to be a horrible person. Rude, combative and
insulting everyone who asks a question. She is not Trumps personal
lawyer, she is supposed to be Americas lawyer.
Thursday, February 12, 2026. Pam Bondi has a psychotic break while
appearing before the House Judiciary Committee, she also reveals on
camera by accident that the Justice Dept is spying on members of
Congress, AP looks into ICE and finds several problematic issues, and
much more.
"You don’t tell me anything
you
washed up lawyer." So hissed Pam da Bimbo Bondi yesterday as she
appeared before the House Judiciary Committee. She can't speak
plainly. She can't address facts. All she knows how to do is rage like
an angry sow. She embarrasses herself in front of the nation. US House
Rep Jim Jordan is the Chair of the Committee and US House Rep Jamie
Raskin is the Ranking Member. We'll note the Ranking Member's opening
statement.
Ranking Member Jamie Raskin: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and welcome, Attorney General Bondi.
You’ve got the best lawyer’s job in America. Your mission is justice and your clients are the American people.
But,
to promote justice for the people, you must listen to the victims, like
the women seated behind you. They’re some of the hundreds of survivors
of Jeffrey Epstein’s global sex trafficking ring demanding the truth for
America and accountability for the abusers who trafficked and raped
them. You still haven’t met with these survivors.
So with their permission, let me introduce to you the survivors and late survivors’ family members who are present today:
Theresa
Helm; Jess Michaels; Lara Blume McGee; Dani Bensky; Liz Stein; Marina
Lacerda; Sky and Amanda Roberts, who are the family of the late Virginia
Giuffre; Sharlene Lund; Rachel B.; and Lisa Phillips.
Now, you’re not showing a lot of interest in the victims, Madam Attorney General.
Whether
it’s Epstein’s human trafficking ring or the homicidal governmental
violence against citizens in Minneapolis, as Attorney General, you’re
siding with the perpetrators and you’re ignoring the victims. That will
be your legacy unless you act quickly to change course.
You’re
running a massive Epstein cover-up right out of the Justice Department.
You’ve been ordered by a subpoena and by Congress to turn over six
million documents, photographs and videos in the Epstein files but
you’ve turned over only three million. You say you’re not turning over
the other 3 million because they’re somehow duplicative. But we know
that there are actual memos of victim statements in there. And you also
took down the Department of Justice’s prosecution memo from 2019. So
it’s clearly not all duplicative. But even if it were, why not release
it, just release all the duplicative stuff.
In
the half you did produce, you redacted the names of abusers, enablers,
accomplices and coconspirators, apparently to spare them embarrassment
and disgrace, which is the exact opposite of what the law ordered you to
do.
Even worse, you shockingly
failed to redact many of the victims’ names, which is what you were
ordered to do by Congress. Some of the victims had come forward
publicly, but many had not. Many had kept their torment private, even
from family and friends. But you published their names, their
identities, their images on thousands of pages for the world to see. So
you ignored the law.
And
even with over 100,000 employees at your disposal, you acted with some
mixture of staggering incompetence, cold indifference, and jaded cruelty
towards more than 1,000 victims raped, abused and trafficked. This
performance screams cover-up.
Convicted
sex trafficker and groomer Ghislaine Maxwell “opened the gates of hell”
to Virginia Giuffre and hundreds of other victims, as Virginia recorded
in her remarkable book Nobody’s Girl.
But when Maxwell was subpoenaed to testify before Congress, you and
Todd Blanche quickly moved her from a higher-security prison to a
minimum-security camp in Texas where she’s enjoyed five-star treatment,
including catered meals, private gym time, and access to a therapy
puppy. All because Todd Blanche, who has utterly failed to investigate
the monstrous crimes of Epstein and Maxwell’s co-conspirators, spent
nine hours with Maxwell to satisfy himself she would have nothing
untoward to say about Donald Trump, which is your only real interest in
this whole matter.
But it’s even worse. You’ve turned the People’s Department of Justice into Trump’s instrument of revenge.
Donald
Trump orders up prosecutions like pizza, and you deliver every time. He
tells you to go after James Comey, Letitia James, Lisa Cook, and Jerome
Powell, the head of the Federal Reserve Board, and Members of the
United States Congress including Adam Schiff, Mark Kelly, Elissa
Slotkin, Chrissy Houlahan, Jason Crow, Chris Deluzio and Maggie
Goodlander to name just a few. And you snap to it. You replace real
prosecutors with counterfeit stooges who robotically do the president’s
bidding. Nothing in American history comes close to this complete
corruption of the justice function and contamination of federal law
enforcement.
The good news
is many serious lawyers at DOJ, including your very own political
appointees—your own people—have refused your lawless orders.
Danielle
Sassoon, your original pick for Acting U.S. Attorney in Manhattan,
resigned rather than follow your corrupt order to quash an indictment
against Mayor Eric Adams as a political favor from Donald Trump. A
Federalist Society member who clerked for Justice Antonin Scalia, U.S.
Attorney Sassoon refused to participate in this blatantly corrupt
scheme. Her top assistant, Hagan Scotten, an Iraq War veteran and
two-time Bronze Star recipient who clerked for Chief Justice John
Roberts and then-Judge Kavanaugh, promptly resigned too, writing to your
office: “I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a
fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion. But it was never going
to be me.”
You and the President
nominated Erik Siebert, a fifteen-year career prosecutor, to be your
U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. But after five
months investigating Letitia James and James Comey, Siebert found no
evidence to justify criminal charges. So you forced him out and replaced
him with Lindsey Halligan, Trump’s personal lawyer from the Mar-a-Lago
documents case, who had zero prosecutorial experience and no
qualifications. And then you were humiliated when a federal judge found
that this corrupt appointment was blatantly unlawful and threw out
Halligan’s indictments entirely. And grand juries of American citizens
have repeatedly rejected your vendettas and baseless indictments brought
by the hacks left at DOJ now, with two different grand juries in
Virginia voting down indictments against Letitia James in a single week.
Just yesterday, another grand jury shut down your vendetta factory by
rejecting an indictment against the six Members of Congress who had
reminded servicemembers that they have a duty to refuse illegal orders.
You
tried to get a grand jury to indict six Members of Congress who were
veterans of our armed forces, on charges of seditious conspiracy, simply
for exercising their First Amendment rights. I hope you will heed the
wisdom and the constitutional patriotism of those grand jurors and not
try it again by doubling down on that humiliation.
As
your best lawyers are sacked for having participated in the January 6
case or just flee for the exits now, your new lawyers keep lying in
court. In dozens of cases, your lawyers have been excoriated for lying
to federal courts. Chief Judge Boasberg, right here in the District of
Columbia, suggested your DOJ presented “a fraud on the court.” Other
judges found your DOJ’s statements to be “inexplicably misleading,”
“patently incredible,” “totally inconsistent,” and “so disingenuous that
the Court is left with little confidence that the [government] can be
trusted to tell the truth about anything.”
Now,
as Ranking Member, I asked the Chairman to add a few extra rounds of
questions today because we each have five hours of questions, not five
minutes, but we’re stuck with five minutes. That’s clearly insufficient
to give voice to America’s victims and survivors and demand answers
about the corruption and cover-ups that have overtaken your Department.
We
have just one round, so we ask you politely but firmly, Madam Attorney
General: please don’t waste one second of our precious time by evading
our questions, changing the subject, randomly reciting statistics to eat
up time, or engaging in personal attacks against Members of Congress.
We saw your performance in the Senate and we aren’t going to accept
that. This isn’t a game. In the Senate, you brought a burn book, a
binder of smears, to attack Members personally for doing the people’s
work of oversight. Please set the burn book aside and answer our
questions. And when you hear us reclaim our time, that means it’s time
for you to stop speaking. We only have five minutes, so when we reclaim
our time, that means you stop. And if you don’t, we will ask the Chair
to stop the clock and let you go on his time.
The
quality of justice in America depends on the character of our
government. Please do your job and bring the Department of Justice back
from the brink. The survivors seated behind you, and the American people
watching everywhere, deserve a Department of Justice worthy of its
name.
I yield back.
She
lied in her opening remarks insisting that she had spent her "entire
life fighting for victims and I will continue to do so." No, Pam, you
can't go after Chump's political enemies and then claim you've spent
your life fighting for victims.
All
she wanted to do was to rant and rave and attack. As she's done
before, she came armed with binders. It's where she writes down her
insults ahead of time. She also carries papers in the binders and that
got her into trouble in this hearing.
Let's note this exchange which was a fairly typical exchange.
US
House Rep Pramila Jayapal: We are joined in this room by
some of the thousands of survivors from Jeffrey Epstein's horrific sex
trafficking ring. They have shown incredible courage in speaking out, in
demanding accountability to bring the predators and pedophiles to
justice. The Epstein Files Transparency Act required your Department of
Justice to disclose the perpetrators connected with Epstein's criminal
activities and to redact the information of survivors to protect their
identities. Let me show you what actually happened. First, in violation
of the law, your department has shown a pattern of redacting the names
of powerful predators. Here behind me is one example of an e-mail from
Epstein to a man whose name was redacted. The e-mail reads "Where are
you? Are you ok. I loved the torture video." Only after members of
Congress demanded that we see the unredacted files did the world learn
the name of this individual, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulaye, the chairman and
CEO of a company that had financial ties to President Trump's business
and personal ties to Trump's advisors, Steve Bannon Second, the survivors were
not similarly protected. Also in violation of the law. Here is another
e-mail entitled Epstein Victim List. We have blurred the names of the
survivors for their protection but your Department of Justice initially
released this list of 32 survivors names with only one name redacted
along with numerous files that disclose not only the names, the e-mails
and the addresses of survivors but also nude photographs and even the
identities of Jane Does who had been protected for decades until your
department released their names. Survivors are now telling us that their
families are finding out for the first time that they were trafficked
by Epstein. In their words "This release does not provide closure. It
feels like a deliberate attempt to intimidate survivors, punish those
who came forward and reinforce the same culture of secrecy that allowed
Epstein's crimes to continue for decades." To the survivors in the
room, if you are willing, please stand, [at least 7 women stood up] and
if you are willing please raise your hands if you have still not been
able to meet with this Department of Justice. Please know for the
record that every single survivor has raised their hand. Attorney
General Bondi, you apologized to the survivors in your opening statement
for what they went through at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein. Will you
turn to them now and apologize for what your Department of Justice has
put them through with the absolutely unacceptable release of the Epstein
files and their information?
AG Pam Bondi: Congress woman, you sat before Merrick Garland, sat in this chair twice --
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: Attorney General Bondi --
AG Pam Bondi: No, I'm gonna finish my answer.
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: No,
I'm going to reclaim my time because I asked you [crosstalk] Attorney
General, I would like you to answer the question which is will you turn
to the survivors? This is not about anybody that came before you. It is
about you taking responsibility for your Department of Justice and the
harm that it has done to the survivors who are standing right behind you
and are waiting for you to turn to them and apologize for what your
Department of Justice members
Chair Jim Jordan: Members get to ask the questions, the witness gets to answer in the way they want to answer,
Pam Bondi: Mr Chairman she doesn't like my -- Why didn't she ask Merrick Garland this.
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: I'm reclaiming my time and when I will claim --
Pam Bondi: I'm not oing to get in the gutter for her theatrics.
Chair Jim Jordan: The time belongs to the gentle lady. The gentle lady has 17 seconds.
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: Thank you. You're not going to answer this question, so let me just
[cross talk]
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: The witness is interrupting.
Pam Bondi: The gutter with this woman.
Chair Jim Jordan: The
gentle lady from Washington controls the time. The gentle lady has 17
seconds. You can proceed with your final 17 seconds.
US House Rep Pramila Jayapal: What a massive cover up this has been and continues to be .
Donald Trump made the release of the Epstein files the center of his
political campaign because he thought it would benefit him. Then you
got into office, Attorney General, claimed to have a client list,
only to then say that there was no list. Your deputy, Todd
Blanche, met alone with Ghislaine Maxwell --
Chair Jim Jordan: The gentle lady has expired.
US
House Rep Pramila Jayapal: -- and transferred her to a minimum security prison and now you
continue the cover up. And I wish that you would turn around to the survivors who are
standing right behind and on a human level apologize for that for what have you
done?
It
was shocking to see Pam Bondi scream and screech and throw down. You
never had the notion that she was defending the country but you always
saw her rush to lie for Donald Chump. Holly Baxter (INDEPENDENT) notes Pam's horrific performance:
At
one point, those survivors of sexual abuse stood up and identified
themselves. It was a particularly painful back-and-forth: Rep. Pramila
Jayapal (D-Wash.) asked the Epstein victims to stand if they were
comfortable. They did. She then asked them to raise their hands if
they’d been unable to meet with Bondi’s DOJ, and every one of them did
so.
Asked whether she’d like to apologize for
such an oversight, Bondi then started talking over Jayapal, repeatedly
saying that she should ask Biden’s AG, Merrick Garland, instead. She
never once glanced back at the victims and eventually ended up at: “I’m
not gonna get in the gutter for [Jayapal’s] theatrics.” The Epstein
victims remained in their seats, unacknowledged.
Even for Bondi, this was an eye-opening performance.
“The
Dow is over $50,000!” she yelled at one point, before adding, after the
shocked laughter of Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), “I don’t know why you’re
laughing! You’re a great stock trader, as I hear, Raskin… That’s what
we should be talking about!”
Indeed, indeed, that
is what we should be talking about. Sure, we could ask about emails that
describe children — possibly as young as 9 years old — being sexually
abused on a secret pedophile island visited frequently by international
elites. Emails that say things like “loved the torture video”. Emails
that should have been released long ago, that the president promised to
release as soon as he came into power about, and that for some reason he
just…didn’t, until they started appearing anyway, still heavily
redacted. But why not instead discuss EMAILS ABOUT HOW MY SHARES IN
BOEING ARE UP, AMIRITE, PAM?!
At one point
during the hearing, exasperated by the fact that Bondi wouldn’t even
directly answer a question about whether it’s important to protect the
identities of sexual assault victims, Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) said,
“You do a kind of Jekyll and Hyde routine over here.” Bondi immediately
tried to drag him into a back-and-forth about what Jekyll and Hyde
“means” (I’m going to charitably assume here that she is aware of the
book) and we never really got to the bottom of anything else. For what
it’s worth, Johnson had been asking whether Bondi believed that the
identities of sexual assault victims should be fully protected.
There
are vital questions that the American public needs transparency, needs
substantive answers on. Instead, what do we get? Accusations of Trump
Derangement Syndrome, name calling, you’re a loser lawyer, this and
that. I mean, coming from the AG of the United States . . . did we get
any meaningful clarity on the Epstein investigations on Epstein files?
To your point, do the victims feel, to what you were saying earlier,
like they’ve been given any transparency, any clarity on any of this?
Have we learned anything new about what DOJ is doing to investigate in
Minnesota? Have we learned anything new about the search warrant in
Fulton County? Have we learned anything new about the fact that dozens
of judges across this country have found that this DOJ lacks
credibility? No, it’s been name calling. It’s been amateurish. It’s an
embarrassment to the Justice Department what we’re seeing from Pam
Bondi.
MORNING JOE today has already noted Bondi's appalling performance.
"We're laughing because she's making a fool ofherself."
Attorney General Pam Bondi at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday seemed to have a printout of Rep. Pramila Jayapal’s history of searches of the Department of Justice’s database of documents related to the notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Photos
of a black binder that Bondi had at the hearing showed the words
“Jayapal Pramila Search History” and a list of documents whose numbers
coincide with the number of Epstein files.
Jayapal,
a Washington state Democrat who sits on the Judiciary Committee, and
other members of Congress have visited the DOJ in recent days to view
documents related to Epstein that are not available to the public.
Jayapal blasted Bondi in a post on X on Wednesday evening.
“It
is totally inappropriate and against the separations of powers for the
DOJ to surveil us as we search the Epstein files,” Jayapal wrote.
“Bondi showed up today with a burn book that held a printed search
history of exactly what emails I searched,” the congresswoman said.
“That is outrageous and I intend to pursue this and stop this spying on members.”
House
Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., when asked by MS Now if Bondi’s alleged
action was appropriate, at first said, “I’m not going to comment on an
allegation that is unsubstantiated. I don’t know anything about it.”
“I haven’t seen or heard anything about that, but that would be inappropriate if it happened,” Johnson said.
Washington, D.C. (February
11, 2026)—Today, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House
Committee on the Judiciary, issued the following statement after
photographs revealed that Attorney General Pam Bondi has tracked the
search history of Members of Congress who have reviewed the unredacted
Epstein files at a satellite office of the Department of Justice:
"The
Department of Justice has required Members of Congress who wish to
review the slightly-less-redacted Epstein files to travel to a DOJ
annex, sit at one of four DOJ-owned computers, use a clunky and
convoluted software system provided by DOJ, and search for and read
documents while DOJ staffers look over our shoulders. It is the perfect
set up for DOJ to spy on Members’ review, monitoring, recording, and
logging every document we choose to pull up.
“Today, photographs of Attorney General Bondi’s ‘burn book’
confirmed my suspicions. These photos show Bondi came to our hearing
with a document entitled ‘Jayapal Pramila Search History’ and then
listed the documents my colleague, Rep. Jayapal, reviewed while at DOJ,
apparently to prepare the Attorney General for any questions Rep.
Jayapal might ask.
“Not only has the
Department of Justice illegally withheld documents from Congress and
the American people. Not only has Attorney General Bondi failed to bring
a single indictment against a single co-conspirator of Jeffrey Epstein
and Ghislaine Maxwell. But now Bondi and her team are spying on Members
of Congress conducting oversight in yet another blatant attempt to
intrude into Congress’s oversight processes.
“It
is an outrage that DOJ is tracking Members’ investigative steps
undertaken to ensure that DOJ is complying with the Epstein File
Transparency Act and using this information for the Attorney General’s
embarrassing polemical purposes. DOJ must immediately cease tracking any
Members’ searches, open up the Epstein review to senior congressional
staff, and publicly release all files—with all the survivors’
information, and only the survivors’ information, properly redacted—as
required by federal law. I will also be asking the DOJ Inspector General
to open an inquiry into this outrageous abuse of power. Let us use this
humiliating disclosure about the Attorney General's work ethics to do a
complete reset on the Epstein coverup.”
Conservative radio host Erick Erickson said Attorney General Pam Bondi should
quit or be canned after she said lawmakers and American citizens should
be celebrating the stock market “smashing records,” rather than being
fixated on the files tied to Jeffrey Epstein.
Erickson shared his disgust with Bondi’s answer in a post on X on Wednesday.
“When
the Attorney General of the United States is asked why she has
prosecuted no one related to Jeffrey Epstein and this is her answer, she
should be fired or resign,” he posted. “But neither will happen, which
is another reason the Democrats are going to have a good election year.”
Let's note another moment from the hearing.
US House Rep Jasmine Crockett: And to be
clear, I'm not going to ask any questions of this witness because this
witness has revealed she has no intentions of answering questions. But
instead I'm going to ask some very basic questions really quickly of my
colleague Becca Balint if she will answer. Right or wrong, raping
children?
US House Rep Becca Balint: Wrong.
US House Rep Jasmine Crockett: Right or wrong, killing random citizens?
US House Rep Becca Balint: Definitely wrong.
US House Rep Jasmine Crockett Right or wrong, enriching yourself as the sitting president of the United States?
US House Rep Becca Balint: Definitely wrong.
US
House Rep Jasmine Crockett: Okay, thank you because I probably never
would have got that with our witness. Our witness who somehow is a
lawyer but doesn't understand how it works with witnesses. I'm not
really sure what law school she went to and what all kind of cases she
tried but typically when you come into a space and somebody's a witness
then they sit there and they answer questions instead of asking
questions. And then we also have this objection that we use as lawyers
called non-responsive when a witness fails to actually answer the
question. But nevertheless, let me address the survivors because that's
exactly who they are. They are not victims. They are survivors. Let
me say thank you for having more courage and more moral clarity in your
pinky fingers than the entire Department of Justice. We are currently
the laughing stock of the world partially because of the failed
leadership within the DOJ as we see kings and queens fallen everywhere
around the world but we don't know the basics of right and wrong in this
country because it's not about partisanship. And that's why I applaud
[US House Rep] Thomas Massie because he's the only person on the
Republican side that has a backbone and knows how to stand up to
corruption. But nevertheless let me keep going. My Democratic
colleagues have been attacked this entire Committee hearing. They have
been lied on. And frankly the American people weren't looking for
that. They were looking for answers about the corruption that they see
coming from this administration. In the written testimony of this
witness -- of this particular witness -- she stated that when she took
office, she had main goals. The first was to end the weaponization of
justice and, second, to return the department to its core mission. Not
only have you lied about both, you've intentionally done the exact
opposite. You're spending more taxpayer resources arresting journalists
than you are prosecuting pedophiles and creeps. In fact, your boss,
the president of the United States, stated that this administration
"took the freedom of speech away" and at your direction DOJ has arrested
Don Lemon and Georgia Fort and I might add that ya'll actually had a
judge that rejected ya'll for trying to arrest Don Lemon before just
like the grand jury rejected ya'll as it relates to Senator Kelly --
just like a grand jury rejected ya'll as it relates to Senator [Elissa]
Slotkin -- just like the case against Tish James was dismissed and the
case against Mr. [James] Comey was dismissed. I completely don't get
how it is that you're sitting at the top of DOJ because you don't seem
to be good at your job. You're spending more tax payer resources
arresting these journalists. In fact, we know after Georgia Fort and
Don Lemon were arrested, we know that there were homes of journalists
that were raided. We know that threatened prosecution against students
protesting your actions and forced tech companies to remove apps used to
track ICE's activities. But let's circle back to you protecting
pedophiles and creeps. because I want to talk about the president and
his possible involvement with Jeffrey Epstein. Now I don't know what
the president might have done with Jeffrey Epstein but unlike this
administration, I believe the facts matter so let's talk about the
facts. Fact number one, Donald Trump is one of the most named people in
the Epstein files. At least 5,000 files contain more than 38,000
references to Trump, his wife or Mar-a-Lago. Fact number two, Jeffrey
Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell made young girls available to Trump on
multiple occasions. For example, according to this file, Ghislaine
Maxwell presented a young girl to President Trump who spent more than 20
minutes apparently flirting with her. Here's another example: this
shows notes from FBI investigators that describe Jeffrey Epstein
transporting a victim to Mar-a-Largo to meet with President Trump where
he bragged to Trump that, "This is a good one." Now I'm not saying that
the president is a pedophile but there is a lot of evidence in these
files that suggest he's very close friends with a lot of men who are
pedophiles. What's crazy about all of this is just that this is a big
cover up and this administration is engaged in it. In fact, this
administration is complicit. But there are numerous others like how the
DOJ is attempting to obstruct justice in the investigation of the rogue
agents who have murdered American citizens. Or how the DOJ seized
voter data from Fulton County in an attempt to steal the 2026 mid-term
elections or how federal agent have Tom Homan on tape accepting a bribe
and your agency killed the investigation. Or how your agency is willing
to give the president a $230 million payday which is unconstitutional.
The Constitution is clear: "The president shall not receive any payment
except his salary while in office." The fact of the matter is that you
will be remembered as one of the worst attorney generals in history --
an attorney general who has prioritized obstruction over justice,
corruption over the law, fealty to the president over loyalty to the
Constitution. And, Mr. Chairman, I will yield.
After the hearing concluded, the Democrats on the House Committee issued the following:
Washington,
D.C. (February 11, 202)—Today, during her oversight hearing before the
House Judiciary Committee, Attorney General Pam Bondi refused to answer
basic questions, aggressively filibustering and resorting to ad hominem
attacks that revealed the depth of her incompetence and incredibility.
Here
are the questions the Attorney General refused to answer before
Congress, amid nationwide calls for truth and transparency:
Bondi refused to answer how many of Epstein’s co-conspirators her DOJ has indicted (zero).
Bondi refused
to answer whether she would create a joint task force to give state
attorneys general and district attorneys around the country access to
DOJ’s trove of evidence regarding Epstein and his co-conspirators, so
they can go build the cases and bring the indictments DOJ refuses to
pursue.
Bondi refused to answer whether the email from the Epstein files involving Steve Tisch is worthy of further investigation.
Bondi refused to answer whether it’s important for prosecutors to protect sexual assault victims’ identities.
Bondi
refused to answer why 500 of her attorneys somehow didn’t redact dozens
of survivors’ names, identities, and sensitive photographs.
Bondi refused to answer why she refused to investigate Prince Andrew who is shown in disturbing photos in the Epstein files.
Bondi refused to answer whether she has knowledge if President Trump was at parties with underage girls.
Bondi
refused to answer whether she has prepared a list of so-called domestic
terrorism groups. And she refused to commit to providing the committee
with that list.
Bondi refused to answer when DOJ decided not to investigate Lex Wexner as a co-conspirator and why.
Bondi refused
to answer whether DOJ owes anything to Epstein’s victims, even as
Donald Trump sues for $10 billion in personal damages from the federal
government.
Bondi refused to answer how many employees work at the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (which she eliminated).
Bondi refused
to answer whether DOJ has questioned Secretary Lutnick and other
Administration officials about their ties to Epstein.
Bondi refused to answer who at DOJ signed off on Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer.
Bondi refused to answer whether her Department would consider recommending a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell.
Bondi refused
to answer whether the President has lied when he spread a crazy
right-wing conspiracy theory about the murder of Minnesota House Speaker
Melissa Hortman.
I
know a little place where the ingredients are always fresh. You can get
a mega-burrito and a Dos Equis to wash it down for not much more than
10 bucks.
If you’re in a bad mood when you
arrive, you won’t be for long, because the workers smile, they laugh,
they seem like they’re having so much fun making your food just the way
you like it that you can’t help but start to feel like you’re having a
little fun yourself. When I’m in there with my parents, the staff are
careful to treat them (and any other older people) with respect. Someone
always comes around from behind the counter to carry my mom’s food to
her table for her.
Last week my favorite
burrito shop was dark. The door was locked. A note posted outside
indicated that they would be closed for the foreseeable future for
kitchen renovations.
No
mention had been made of upcoming renovations at any of my prior visits
though. With ICE known to be skulking about, it didn’t exactly take
Sherlock Holmes to figure out what had really happened.
Immigration
agents reportedly kidnapped several of the employees and are in the
process of deporting them. I confirmed this as best I could, which
basically meant asking people in the area what they had heard, because
the Department of Homeland Security generally won’t tell taxpayers
(their bosses) who they are taking or what they are doing with them.
I
say “kidnapped” because this most definitely was not an “arrest” and
there is no better word for what actually took place. When a police
officer takes another person into custody, he or she is acting under the
color of legal authority. This police officer must respect the
constitutional rights of the accused, and must have probable cause
indicating that the person being arrested has committed a crime. When
police officers make arrests, their badges and the badge numbers on them
are visible, their last names are stitched into their uniforms, and
their faces are uncovered, so that if your rights are indeed violated
while you are in custody, you know who to complain about later on. When a
police officer goes beyond the legal authority with which he or she is
entrusted, that police officer is subject to disciplinary action, civil
liability, or even criminal prosecution.
The president — who has himself been convicted of far more serious crimes than almost all of the people
his administration is deporting — calling some thug a police officer
does not make him one. Masked, unaccountable, unidentifiable ICE agents
who trample the constitutional rights of every person they encounter are
not law enforcement. One cannot enforce the law by breaking the law,
and the Constitution is the supreme law of the land. These are kidnappings, plain and simple.
Plain and simple. And let's call it what it is. The American people are exhausted by Chump's lies on immigration. Natasha Korecki (NBC NEWS) notes:
Support
for President Donald Trump’s immigration agenda is in free fall in
early 2026 after federal immigration agents shot and killed two
Americans last month, according to the new NBC News Decision Desk Poll
powered by SurveyMonkey.
The administration’s
aggressive tactics and deportation goals have dragged down Americans’
views of Trump on the very issue that helped sweep him into office, the
survey shows.
Immigration and border security had long
stood out as a strength for Trump in polls, both as he ran for a second
term in 2024 and in the first year of his new administration. Now,
Trump’s ratings on the issue have sunk to the same level as his overall
job approval rating.
In a
double-digit shift, 49% of adults strongly disapprove of how Trump has
handled border security and immigration, up from 38% strong disapproval
last summer and 34% in April. Self-identified independents drove the
erosion, with the share of strong disapprovers in that group having
risen 11 points since August.
Fully 60% of
those surveyed in the week after the death of Alex Pretti in Minnesota
somewhat or strongly disapproved of Trump’s actions on border security
and immigration. Another 40% approved of Trump on the issue, including
27% who strongly approved and 13% who somewhat approved.
Meanwhile, his overall approval rating declined slightly to 39%, about even with his rating on immigration and border security.
Investigators
said one immigration enforcement official got away with physically
assaulting his girlfriend for years. Another admitted he repeatedly
sexually abused a woman in his custody. A third is charged with taking
bribes to remove detention orders on people targeted for deportation.
At
least two dozen U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement employees and
contractors have been charged with crimes since 2020, and their
documented wrongdoing includes patterns of physical and sexual abuse,
corruption and other abuses of authority, a review by The Associated Press found.
While
most of the cases happened before Congress voted last year to give ICE
$75 billion to hire more agents and detain more people, experts say
these kinds of crimes could accelerate given the sheer volume of new
employees and their empowerment to use aggressive tactics to arrest and deport people.
The
Trump administration has emboldened agents by arguing they have
“absolute immunity” for their actions on duty and by weakening
oversight. One judge recently suggested
that ICE was developing a troubling culture of lawlessness, while
experts have questioned whether job applicants are getting enough
vetting and training.
“Once a
person is hired, brought on, goes through the training and they are not
the right person, it is difficult to get rid of them and there will be a
price to be paid later down the road by everyone,” said Gil
Kerlikowske, who served as commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection from 2014 to 2017.
Foley notes specific cases from last year and this year:
Arrests
of ICE personnel over the last year have been a headache for the
agency, which has labeled many of the people they deport as the “worst
of the worst” because of their rap sheets.
The
AP found at least nine such arrests across the country. They include the
assistant ICE field office supervisor in Cincinnati, who has been
jailed since December after a judge found he was a danger to the public
who had violently assaulted his girlfriend for years.
Two
ICE employees in Minnesota faced federal sexual misconduct charges
related to underage girls last year, including an employment eligibility
auditor arrested in a sting operation in November. The auditor has
pleaded not guilty. An ICE investigator in the state pleaded guilty to
sending images and videos of himself having sex with a 17-year-old girl,
whose background he searched in a law enforcement database.
Two
ICE agents face charges for incidents that occurred outside Chicago
while they were off-duty but which involved their agency work. One was
charged last month with assaulting a protester who was filming him at a
gas station. Another was cited for driving drunk shortly after leaving
work at a detention center with his government firearm in the vehicle.
The
AP’s review found a pattern of charges involving ICE employees and
contractors who mistreated vulnerable people in their care.
A
former top official at an ICE contract facility in Texas was sentenced
to probation on Feb. 4 after acknowledging he grabbed a handcuffed
detainee by the neck and slammed him into a wall last year. Prosecutors
had downgraded the charge from a felony to a misdemeanor.
In
December, an ICE contractor pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a
detainee at a detention facility in Louisiana. Prosecutors said the man
had sexual encounters with a Nicaraguan national over a five-month
period in 2025 as he instructed other detainees to act as lookouts.
Let's wind down with this from Senator Adam Schiff's office:
Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senators Adam
Schiff and Alex Padilla (both D-Calif.) joined Senators Tim Kaine
(D-Va.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) in leading a letter to
U.S. Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Marco Rubio
pushing the Trump administration to immediately end deportation flights
to Iran.
Last month, it was reported that
the administration resumed the deportation of dozens of Iranians, many
of whom could be persecuted, tortured, or even executed if they are
forced to return to Iran. That reporting came amid massive
demonstrations in Iran, the Iranian government’s violent crackdown on
protesters, and threats from President Donald Trump to use U.S. military
force against the current Iranian regime.
“Given Iran’s horrific human rights record, we are deeply concerned
that the Trump administration is returning people to a country where
they may be persecuted or tortured, in violation of U.S. and
international law,” the Senators wrote. “As you know,
the United States has long been a safe haven for Iranians fleeing
oppression and persecution by the Iranian regime because of their
political ideology, religious beliefs, or sexual orientation. In the
eyes of the regime, some of these ‘crimes’ are punishable by death, and
deportees have stated they’ll likely face such sentences if sent back to
Iran.”
The Senators continued, “…despite your
acknowledgement of the Iranian government’s wanton disregard for basic
human rights, the Trump administration has chosen to return Iranian
citizens to the very place that they fled for their lives.”
“Throughout your career in the Senate, you were an advocate for
Cubans escaping oppression and persecution by the Castro regime and for
the protection of political dissidents and religious minorities around
the world. We were glad to work with you on these issues,” the Senators concluded. “Now
we ask you and the Trump administration to ensure that the United
States does not violate U.S. and international law by returning people
who have a well-founded fear of persecution and torture by the brutal
Iranian regime.”
In addition to Schiff, Padilla, Kaine, and Welch, the letter was
cosigned by Senators Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Chris
Van Hollen (D-Md.), Jeffrey Merkley (D-Ore.), Angela Alsobrooks
(D-Md.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), and Cory Booker
(D-N.J.).
The full text of the letter is available here and below:
Dear Secretary Rubio,
In late September, the media and Iranian American human rights
advocates began reporting that the Trump administration had reached a
deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran to deport Iranian citizens back
to Iran. According to these reports, the administration sent 45 people
to Tehran via Qatar in late September or early October. Some of these
individuals stated that they “begged not to be sent to Iran because they
feared for their lives.” Once they landed in Tehran, they said that
they were “made to fill out forms explaining why they had left Iran and
sought asylum in America,” and were “called in for interrogation by the
intelligence wing of the Revolutionary Guards Corps.” On December 7,
2025, the administration deported another approximately 50 Iranian
citizens to Iran, this time through Kuwait. On January 25, yet another
flight deported approximately 14 Iranians; the number would have been
much higher if not for a major measles outbreak at the detention site
and widespread bipartisan pushback.
Given Iran’s horrific human rights record, we are deeply
concerned that the Trump administration is returning people to a country
where they may be persecuted or tortured, in violation of U.S. and
international law. As you know, the United States has long been a safe
haven for Iranians fleeing oppression and persecution by the Iranian
regime because of their political ideology, religious beliefs, or sexual
orientation. In the eyes of the regime, some of these ‘crimes’ are
punishable by death, and deportees have stated they’ll likely face such
sentences if sent back to Iran.
Iran’s violations of human rights are extensive, well-documented,
and horrifying. Basic rights, like those of the freedom of expression,
religion, and assembly are not only infringed upon – they are violently
suppressed through torture, imprisonment, forced disappearances, and
executions. You and others in the Trump administration spoke extensively
about the horrors of the Iranian regime when attempting to justify the
June 22, 2025, U.S. military strikes on Iran’s nuclear program. More
recently, you personally have spoken against the regime’s violent
suppression of protesters that experts believe have left more than 6,800
people dead – a figure that continues to climb. Yet despite your
acknowledgement of the Iranian government’s wanton disregard for basic
human rights, the Trump administration has chosen to return Iranian
citizens to the very place that they fled for their lives.
Throughout your career in the Senate, you were an advocate for
Cubans escaping oppression and persecution by the Castro regime and for
the protection of political dissidents and religious minorities around
the world. We were glad to work with you on these issues. Now we ask you
and the Trump administration to ensure that the United States does not
violate U.S. and international law by returning people who have a
well-founded fear of persecution and torture by the brutal Iranian
regime.