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Report: Trump Considering Firing FBI Director Kash Patel

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Gage Skidmore Flickr

Presidentย Donald Trumpย is weighing whether or not to fireย Kash Patelย as the FBI director in the โ€œcoming months.”

The MS Nowย reportย cited โ€œthree people with knowledge of the situation who requested anonymity in order to speak freely.โ€

White House Spokeswomanย Abigail Jacksonย released a statement to MS NOW in response to their report, saying, โ€œPresident Trump has assembled the most talented and impressive Administration in history and they are doing an excellent job carrying out the Presidentโ€™s agenda. FBI Director Patel is a critical member of the Presidentโ€™s team and he is working tirelessly to restore integrity to the FBI.โ€

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt blasted the report on X.

This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.

Federal Judge Dismisses Indictments Against James Comey and Letitia James

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A federal judge on Monday threw out the criminal indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, ruling that the prosecutor who brought the charges had been improperly appointed.

U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie dismissed the false-statements case against Comey and the bank-fraud case against James without prejudice, meaning federal prosecutors could seek new indictments in the future.

In a sharply worded opinion, Currie wrote: โ€œI conclude that the Attorney Generalโ€™s attempt to install Ms. Halligan as Interim U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia was invalid and that Ms. Halligan has been unlawfully serving in that role since September 22, 2025.โ€

Judge Rules Prosecutor Was Not Legally Installed

The ruling centers on Lindsey Halligan, whom Attorney General Pam Bondi tapped as interim U.S. attorney in one of the Justice Departmentโ€™s most influential districts. The appointment raised immediate questions because Halligan had no prosecutorial experience and assumed the position just days after the removal of the prior interim U.S. attorney, Erik Siebert.

Halligan personally presented both cases to the grand jury and was the sole lawyer to sign the resulting indictmentsโ€”an unusual move given the high-profile nature of the cases and the absence of career prosecutors from the Eastern District of Virginia.

Defense attorneys for Comey and James argued that Halligan had no lawful authority to act. Abbe Lowell, representing Letitia James, said Halligan was effectively a โ€œprivate personโ€ when she entered the grand jury rooms and โ€œcompletely unauthorized to be in them.โ€

DOJ Attempted to Ratify the Indictments

The Justice Department has defended Halliganโ€™s installation, and Bondi attempted to ratify the indictments retroactively, an action Currie noted would not have been necessary had the appointment been legally valid.

During a recent hearing, DOJ attorney Henry Whitaker characterized the controversy as โ€œat best a paperwork error.โ€ Currie was not persuaded, signaling skepticism about Halliganโ€™s standing even before issuing Mondayโ€™s order.

Currie, a Clinton-era appointee now based in South Carolina, was assigned to the case after Virginiaโ€™s federal judges recused themselves due to the unusual procedural issues raised by Halliganโ€™s appointment. The challenges brought by Comey and James were consolidated because they involved identical questions of authority.

High-Profile Cases Scrapped, For Now

The dismissals mark a significant development in two of the most closely watched prosecutions targeting officials long viewed unfavorably by conservatives for their roles in investigations and legal actions against former President Donald Trump. Comey has been a lightning rod for criticism over the FBIโ€™s handling of the 2016 Trump-Russia investigation, while Letitia James led New Yorkโ€™s aggressive civil case against Trump and his business empire.

The DOJ could appeal Currieโ€™s ruling or choose to bring the charges againโ€”this time through a properly appointed U.S. attorney.

Conservative Activist Punched In Face Files Lawsuit After Manhattan DA Admits Mistake

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Washington D.C., USA - January 22, 2015; A Pro-Life woman clashes with a group of Pro-Choice demonstrators at the U.S. Supreme Court.

A conservative pro-life activist who went viral earlier this year after being punched repeatedly during a street-interview segment in New York City has now filed a civil lawsuit against her alleged attacker.

Savannah Craven Antao โ€” a pro-life advocate and host of the YouTube channel Her Patriot Voice โ€” says she was gathering on-camera interviews on April 3 for the pro-life organization Live Action when she was physically assaulted by Brianna J. Rivers, 30, of the Bronx. The incident, captured on video, spread widely across social media and conservative news outlets, sparking outrage among free-speech and pro-life advocates.

Details of the Lawsuit

According to the complaint filed Nov. 18 in Bronx Supreme Court, Craven Antao required emergency medical treatment after the attack and received stitches, amassing more than $3,000 in medical expenses. Attorneys with the Thomas More Society allege Rivers has โ€œknowingly, willfully and maliciously continued to mock [Savannah] and her views online in order to further inflict emotional distress.โ€

The suit further states that Rivers mocked Craven Antaoโ€™s Christian faith and even created merchandise celebrating the assault. One alleged online post displayed a T-shirt design reading โ€œBAM!โ€ with an image of a fist hitting a face โ€” reportedly created by Rivers and a cousin to raise money for Riversโ€™ legal defense.

Craven Antaoโ€™s attorneys say their client has experienced symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder and has received hundreds of violent threats since the incident. The lawsuit seeks compensatory and punitive damages for assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Criticism of Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg

Rivers was initially charged with second-degree assault โ€” a felony โ€” but the case fell apart in July after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Braggโ€™s office failed to turn over discovery materials by the legal deadline. The office then downgraded the charge to a misdemeanor before the entire case was dismissed.

Bragg, a frequent target of criticism from conservatives for his handling of violent crime and his perceived leniency toward offenders, later acknowledged his officeโ€™s failure.

โ€œEvery victim deserves their day in court, and our office has reached out to apologize to Ms. Craven Antao for the unacceptable error of missing the discovery deadline,โ€ a spokesperson wrote in September. โ€œWe are taking immediate internal steps in light of this case.โ€

But for Craven Antao, the damage was already done.

โ€œI have to look over my shoulder and worry about if somebody who supports her actions โ€ฆ is going to try to do something else,โ€ she told Fox News Digital. โ€œBecause what the DA Alvin Bragg himself has shown to people, with letting this case be dropped, is that they can go assault somebody and hurt them if they disagree with them and nothing is going to happen.โ€

Fears for Conservative Journalists and Activists

Craven Antao said she ultimately filed the civil suit to hold Rivers accountable and to send a message about political violence: โ€œFirst, Iโ€™d really appreciate my over $3,000 in medical bills to be paid off, because I should not be responsible for those. Second, itโ€™s to send a message โ€” hopefully to show her that she canโ€™t do this again.โ€

She also connected her concerns to broader safety issues for conservative figures, referencing the recent killing of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.

โ€œIf they could do it to somebody like him, who has the resources to have the security and the checks and all the people surrounding him, what does this say for just average journalists โ€ฆ who donโ€™t have the means to hire a whole security team and be armed?โ€ she said.

Craven Antao added that online threats and encouragement of Riversโ€™ behavior have left her uncertain about what could happen next. โ€œWith all the threats online and the comments she โ€˜likes,โ€™ encouraging her behavior, it makes me wonder if the wrong person is going to find me next time and something worse will happen.โ€

Defense from Rivers

Rivers previously issued a public apology on Facebook on April 5, though she also accused Craven Antao of provoking the incident.

โ€œI am sorry,โ€ Rivers wrote, โ€œbut cannot sit around and allow you to continue pushing this one-sided narrative. I understand hands being put on someone is never the answer, but throwing rocks and hiding hands is worse. Savannah is a professional antagonist, not a โ€˜reporter,โ€™ and the truth will be told.โ€

Legal Team Responds

Thomas More Society attorney Christopher Ferrara sharply criticized Braggโ€™s office, saying their inaction forced Craven Antao to pursue civil remedies.

โ€œSavannah was violently assaulted for peacefully expressing her pro-life beliefs and then humiliated all over again when the attacker went online to glorify it,โ€ Ferrara said. โ€œThe D.A.โ€™s office had every opportunity to pursue justice and, due to their incompetency or lack of will, failed to prosecute this vicious assault. Their refusal left us with no choice but to file civil action to hold Rivers accountable.โ€

For Craven Antao, the lawsuit is not just about compensation โ€” itโ€™s about setting a precedent.

โ€œHonestly, I hope that she eventually finds God,โ€ Craven Antao said. โ€œThatโ€™s what I pray for, because itโ€™s obvious that sheโ€™s got a lot of deep trauma rooted, and she takes it out on other people.โ€

DOJ Confirms Comey Grand Jury Didn’t See Final Indictment

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The Justice Department admitted in federal court Wednesday that the grand jury which charged former FBI Director James Comey never reviewed the final version of the indictment that prosecutors ultimately filed.

During questioning by U.S. District Judge Michael Nachmanoff, prosecutors conceded that interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan failed to bring the revised indictment back to the full grand jury after jurors declined to approve one of the original counts. Instead of resubmitting the updated charges, Halligan took the altered document directly to a magistrate judgeโ€™s courtroom, where only the grand jury foreperson and one additional juror signed it, according to CNN.

Judge Nachmanoff ordered the Justice Department to file a detailed response by 5 p.m. Wednesday addressing the revelations.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tyler Lemons attempted to justify the process, claiming โ€œthe new indictment wasnโ€™t a new indictment.โ€ Nachmanoff, however, swiftly dismissed that explanation.

Comeyโ€™s attorney, Michael Dreeben, seized on the governmentโ€™s admission, arguing that because the full grand jury never considered the altered charges, โ€œno indictment was returned.โ€ He also noted that the statute of limitations has now run out on the allegations that Comey lied to Congressโ€”meaning prosecutors may no longer have any valid path to pursue the case.

Prosecutors further revealed they were instructed by the deputy attorney generalโ€™s office not to disclose whether career DOJ lawyers had prepared a memo recommending against indicting Comey before Halligan presented the case to the grand jury, Politico reported. Multiple outlets have indicated that DOJ career staff believed the evidence was too weak to justify charges.

Halliganโ€”appointed interim U.S. attorney in 2025 after working in insurance law and serving as a personal lawyer and White House aide to President Donald Trumpโ€”had no prior experience leading federal criminal prosecutions. She served as the sole prosecutor presenting the case to the grand jury.

Earlier this week, a federal magistrate judge criticized the handling of the investigation, citing โ€œprofound investigative misstepsโ€ and raising serious concerns about the integrity of the grand jury process under Halliganโ€™s oversight.

โ€œThe Court recognizes that the relief sought by the defense is rarely granted,โ€ Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick wrote. โ€œHowever, the record points to a disturbing pattern of profound investigative missteps, missteps that led an FBI agent and a prosecutor to potentially undermine the integrity of the grand jury proceeding.โ€

Report: US Planning Prisoner Swap With Russia

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Kremlin.ru, via Wikimedia Commons

The United States and Russia are reportedly quietly reopening talks on a possible prisoner-exchange that could determine the fate of at least eight Americans still held in Russia. According to Russian special envoy Kirill Dmitrievโ€”who visited Washington in late Octoberโ€”discussions with U.S. officials were โ€œhumanitarian in nature, such as possible exchanges of prisoners that the U.S. side has been working on.โ€ A senior U.S. official confirmed the outreach and described the atmosphere as constructive, though emphasized that no agreement has yet been reached.

โ€œThe U.S. will welcome the release of any detained American,โ€ the official said, underscoring that Washington views this strictly through the lens of American lives, not political grandstanding.

During Dmitrievโ€™s trip he met U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff. A source familiar with the conversations told Axios that Moscow hopes such a swap would โ€œcreate more trust between the countries.โ€ From a Republican perspective, this is exactly the kind of outcome our diplomacy should be pursuing: Americans held abroad should be brought home, and Russia should see we are serious, not passive.

While a handful of Americans were released earlier this year under separate agreements, these talks focus squarely on the eight who remain behind barsโ€”several caught up in cases the U.S. describes as politically tinged or based on contested evidence. According to Axios, the names sent to Moscow earlier by the U.S. include:

  • Stephen James Hubbard, 73, accused of fighting as a mercenary in Ukraine
  • David Barnes, serving a 21-year sentence after a cross-border custody dispute
  • Robert Gilman, former Marine convicted of assaulting a police officer
  • Eugene Spector, sentenced on bribery and espionage charges
  • Michael Travis Leake and Robert Romanov Woodland, jailed on drug offenses
  • Daniel Joseph Schneider, convicted of abducting his son
  • Gordon Black, a U.S. soldier imprisoned for theft and alleged threats

U.S. officials havenโ€™t confirmed whether these eight are the focus of the current discussionsโ€”but with Moscow signalling interest, and Washington keen to show it can deliver for detained Americans, the groundwork for a high-stakes swap is clearly in motion.

Why this matters

For the Republican-minded audience, this is about America first: no American left behind, accountability for Russiaโ€™s malign practices, and the restoration of American strength in diplomacy. Critics of past Democratic administrations argue that Russia has often treated U.S. citizens as bargaining chipsโ€”and the fact that Washington is now engaging quietly, but seriously, signals a turn toward a tougher posture.

What have we achieved so far under Trump?

Itโ€™s worth remembering that under the Trump administration, significant steps were taken to bring Americans home:

  • In February 2025, the U.S. secured the release of Marc Fogel, an American schoolteacher imprisoned in Russia for possession of medical cannabis (a 14-year sentence), in what was acknowledged as a prisoner exchange.
  • In April 2025, another U.S. citizen, dual-national ballet dancer Ksenia Karelina, was freed from Russia in a swap described by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio as secured through Trumpโ€™s efforts.

These releases underscore a Trump-era focus on returning Americans held by adversarial powers, not leaving them forgotten. While this upcoming swap is not yet finalized, the very fact that Moscow and Washington are in active dialogue is a sign the U.S. is not passive when its citizens are wrongfully detained.

The road ahead

There are still major questions to resolve: who exactly will be part of the swap? What will the U.S. give up?

Trump Calls Greene A ‘Traitor’ Amid Fight For Epstein File Transparency

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Photo via Gage Skidmore Flickr

President Trump pushed back Sunday evening against Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greeneโ€™s (R-Ga.) warnings about her personal safety, escalating an already tense dispute within the GOP over the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files. Speaking to reporters on the tarmac before departing Palm Beach, Fla., the president reiterated his criticism of Greene, again referring to the outspoken conservative as a โ€œtraitorโ€ when asked about her claim that Trumpโ€™s rhetoric could endanger her life.

โ€œMarjorie โ€˜Traitorโ€™ Greene,โ€ Trump said, correcting a reporter who used the congresswomanโ€™s actual name. โ€œI donโ€™t think her life is in danger. I donโ€™t think โ€” frankly, I donโ€™t think anybody cares about her.โ€

A short time later, Trump doubled down on Truth Social, taking aim at Greene as tensions continue to rise over her calls for the full release of files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. โ€œWacky Marjorie โ€˜Traitorโ€™ Brown (Remember, Green turns to Brown where there is ROT involved!) is working overtime to try and portray herself as a victim when, in actuality, she is the cause of all of her own problems,โ€ Trump wrote. โ€œThe fact is, nobody cares about this Traitor to our Country!โ€

Greene, who has long portrayed herself as one of Trumpโ€™s staunchest allies, had posted earlier on X that โ€œthe hoax pizza deliveries have started now, to my house and family members,โ€ and said her familyโ€™s construction business had received a pipe bomb threat. She argued that Trumpโ€™s attacks on her were โ€œa dog whistle to dangerous radicals that could lead to serious attacks on me and my family.โ€

Responding to Trump labeling her a traitor, Greene wrote that the accusation is โ€œabsolutely untrue and horrificโ€ and said such language โ€œputs blood in the water and creates a feeding frenzy. And it could ultimately lead to a harmful or even deadly outcome.โ€

โ€œI am not a traitor,โ€ she insisted. โ€œHowever, when the President of the United States irresponsibly calls a Member of Congress of his own party, traitor, he is signaling what must be done to a traitor.โ€

Watch:

Greene defended her record and her long-standing loyalty to Trump. โ€œI fought harder than anyone to help President Trump get elected and I support his administration and the promises we made on the campaign,โ€ she wrote. โ€œMy voting record is one of the most conservative voting records in Congress and Iโ€™m very proud of that. The toxic and dangerous rhetoric in politics must end and we need healing in this country for all Americans.โ€

The dispute comes as Greene has intensified her criticism of Trumpโ€™s earlier reluctance to endorse the full release of the Epstein filesโ€”documents many Republicans argue should be made public to expose potential wrongdoing and eliminate politically motivated speculation. The House is expected to vote this week on a measure compelling the Department of Justice to release those records. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who initiated the discharge petition to force the vote, said he expects significant Republican support.

By Ralph Alswang, White House photographer – https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/clinton-epstein-maxwell/, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=143417695

Republican pressure on Trump increased last week after Democrats selectively released new emails, including one allegedly written by Epstein claiming Trump โ€œknew about the girls.โ€ Many conservatives view the move as a partisan attempt to smear Trump and distract from Democratic figures who were associated with Epstein. In response, and just minutes before his latest Truth Social post criticizing Greene, Trump urged House Republicans to back full transparency.

Lawmakers โ€œshould vote to release the Epstein files,โ€ Trump said, arguing, โ€œwe have nothing to hide, and itโ€™s time to move on from this Democrat Hoax perpetrated by Radical Left Lunatics in order to deflect from the Great Success of the Republican Party.โ€

Still, Massie cautioned that the Justice Departmentโ€”now conducting new probes into Epsteinโ€™s alleged connections to Democratsโ€”might use those investigations to justify withholding certain materials even after Congress acts. Republicans warn that bureaucratic resistance could undermine the effort for full disclosure, a point fueling frustration both inside and outside the party.

BBC Officially Apologizes To Trump For Deceptive Edit

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The British broadcaster BBC has formally apologized to the White House for the way it edited a clip of President Trumpโ€™s speech on January 6, 2021 โ€” the day before the Capitol attack. The apology comes just days after President Trumpโ€™s legal team threatened the BBC with a $1 billion lawsuit over the segment, which appeared in a documentary.

According to a BBC spokesperson, โ€œLawyers for the BBC have written to President Trumpโ€™s legal team in response to a letter received on Sunday.โ€ The BBC added: โ€œChair [Samir Shah] has separately sent a personal letter to the White House making clear to President Trump that he and the Corporation are sorry for the edit of the Presidentโ€™s speech on 6 January 2021, which featured in the programme.โ€ The BBC also confirmed that there are no plans to rebroadcast the documentary Trump: A Second Chance? on any of its platforms.

The broadcaster acknowledged that โ€œthe way the speech was edited did give the impression of a direct call for violent action,โ€ and referred to it as โ€œan error in judgement.โ€ The BBC nonetheless stated that it strongly disagrees there is a valid defamation claim.

The specific clip in question showed Trump saying to his rally crowd: โ€œWeโ€™re going to walk down to the Capitol, and Iโ€™ll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.โ€ A fuller official transcript and video, however, show that Trump also told his supporters to march โ€œpeacefully and patrioticallyโ€ to the Capitol.

President Trumpโ€™s lawsuit accuses the BBC of defamation, alleging the broadcaster caused โ€œoverwhelming financial and reputational harmโ€ with the editing. With this apology, the BBC has taken a step toward mollifying the matter โ€” but the threat of litigation remains.

President Trump has a well-documented history of filing lawsuits (or threatening them) against major media outlets. Here are a few notable examples:

  • Trumpโ€™s legal team recently filed a $15 billion defamation and libel lawsuit against The New York Times, four of its journalists, and publisher Penguin Random House. He accuses them of publishing false allegations about his business and political career, saying they harmed his brand and business interests.
  • Earlier in 2025 he filed a $10 billion lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal and its owner (including Rupert Murdoch) over an article about alleged ties between Trump and the financier Jeffrey Epstein.
  • In 2024, a settlement was reached when parent company Paramount Global (of CBS) paid $16 million to resolve a suit Trump brought over purportedly misleading editing of a 2024 interview on 60 Minutes.
  • Legal-watchers note that by mid-2025 Trump was involved in as many new media and defamation lawsuits as he was in all of 2024 โ€” reflecting a significant escalation of his willingness to use litigation in his media disputes

Special Prosecutor Assigned To Trump 2020 Election Case

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President Donald Trump participates in a welcome ceremony with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman Al Saud at the Royal Court Palace in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, May 13, 2025. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)

A new twist has emerged in the Fulton County election interference case against President Donald Trump. On Friday, a special prosecutor was appointed to replace embattled District Attorney Fani Willis (D), who was disqualified after a court found her romantic relationship with a top prosecutor created an appearance of impropriety.

Peter Skandalakis, executive director of Georgiaโ€™s Prosecuting Attorneysโ€™ Council (PAC), announced that after failing to find another willing candidate, he would step in personally to oversee the case.

โ€œSeveral prosecutors were contacted and, while all were respectful and professional, each declined the appointment,โ€ Skandalakis said in a statement. โ€œOut of respect for their privacy and professional discretion, I will not identify those prosecutors or disclose their reasons for declining.โ€

The move came just as a judge-imposed deadline loomed for PAC to name a new prosecutorโ€”or risk seeing the entire case dismissed.

Skandalakis explained that while โ€œit would have been simpleโ€ to let the deadline expire, he believed โ€œthat was not the right course of action,โ€ citing the publicโ€™s interest in ensuring the matter is resolved properly.

The Georgia courtโ€™s decision to remove Willis cast major doubt on the future of the case, which accuses Trump and several allies of racketeering and other charges related to challenging the 2020 election results. Trump and most of his co-defendants have pleaded not guilty, maintaining that they did nothing wrong in questioning the outcome of the election. Four others accepted plea deals.

With Willis out, Skandalakis now has full discretion over whether to continue pursuing the case or to drop the charges entirely.

โ€œMy only objective is to ensure that this case is handled properly, fairly, and with full transparencyโ€”discharging my duties without fear, favor, or affection,โ€ he said.

This isnโ€™t the first time Skandalakis has been involved in a high-profile matter stemming from Willisโ€™s conduct. After she was previously barred from investigating Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones (R) due to her involvement in a political fundraiser against him, Skandalakis also took overโ€”and ultimately declined to bring charges.

Citing that past experience, he said his familiarity with similar issues makes him the best candidate to take over the Trump case.

The original indictment accused Trump and more than a dozen associates of an โ€œunlawful conspiracyโ€ to challenge President Bidenโ€™s 2020 victory in Georgia. The case is one of several politically charged prosecutions targeting Trump during his campaign to return to the White Houseโ€”the first criminal cases ever brought against a then-former U.S. president.

Trump was previously convicted in New York on business record charges tied to a 2016 hush money payment. Meanwhile, his two federal prosecutionsโ€”for alleged election interference and mishandling classified documentsโ€”were dismissed following his reelection to a second term.

PAC officials had confirmed as late as Thursday that no replacement had been found, suggesting the decision came together quickly.

On Monday, Skandalakis addressed Trumpโ€™s recent presidential pardons for several allies charged in the Georgia case, saying his office had โ€œdiligentlyโ€ worked on the matter since Willisโ€™s removal and would continue to do so โ€œwithout being influenced by matters outside the scope of our assigned task.โ€

He also clarified that Trumpโ€™s pardons apply only to federal charges, not state cases.

โ€œTherefore, the task before my office remains unchanged,โ€ Skandalakis said.

Republicans Uncover Epsteinโ€™s Coordination With Reporters To Smear Trump

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By Ralph Alswang, White House photographer - https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/clinton-epstein-maxwell/, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=143417695

Just hours after the White House publicly accused congressional Democrats of selectively leaking emails related to Jeffrey Epstein on Wednesday, Republicans on the House Oversight Committee released tens of thousands of additional pages of documents. These include email exchanges between Epstein and prominent journalists.

A significant portion of the new material shows correspondence between Epstein and writer-turned-biographer Michael Wolff. Wolff reached out to Epstein multiple times, discussing not only Epsteinโ€™s public image but how to leverage criticism of Donald Trump for strategic benefit.

In February 2016, Wolff wrote to Epstein:

โ€œNYT called me about you and Trump,โ€
โ€œAlso, Hillary campaign digging deeply. Again, you should consider preempting.โ€

A month later they discussed plans ahead of the release of Filthy Rich โ€” a true-crime book by James Patterson about Epstein, who was Pattersonโ€™s neighbor in Palm Beach. Wolff suggested to Epstein:

โ€œBecoming an anti-Trump voice gives you a certain political cover which you decidedly donโ€™t have now.โ€
And he added:
โ€œPatterson can be counted on to produce a bestseller, and while he isn’t regarded as a serious writer, he’ll surely be unloading a lot of tabloid copy โ€ฆ Because this will be tied to the election, the Trump-Clinton angle will amp up the attention 10-fold, in fact, possibly, a hundred fold. Possibly more than anything you’ve encountered before.โ€

When Epstein asked Wolff what he should say publicly about his relationship with Trump, Wolffโ€™s advice was pointed:

โ€œIf he says he hasn’t been on the plane or to the house, then that gives you a valuable PR and political currency,โ€
โ€œYou can hang him in a way that potentially generates a positive benefit for you, or, if it really looks like he could win, you could save him, generating a debt. Of course, it is possible that, when asked, he’ll say Jeffrey is a great guy and has gotten a raw deal and is a victim of political correctness, which is to be outlawed in a Trump regime.โ€

In further correspondence, Wolff requested introductions for Epstein to two figures close to Trump: business leader and inaugural-committee chair Tom Barrack and former federal prosecutor Kathy Ruemmler. He told Epstein he sought โ€œan off-the-record perspective on White House procedures,โ€ while researching his book about Trumpโ€™s first 100 days in office. He also asked whether former President Bill Clinton would confirm he had never been to Epsteinโ€™s private U.S. Virgin Islands island, Little St. John โ€” a place Clinton has publicly denied visiting. Epsteinโ€™s longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell has also denied seeing Clinton there.

The documents show that Epstein and Wolff planned to meet as recently as May 2019 โ€” months before Epstein died in a federal jail cell while awaiting trial.

Read some of the emails below:

Some of the newly released material included a short video of a dog and what appear to be chew toys modeled after Trump and the 2016 presidential rival Hillary Clinton. Others appear to be slides from an adviser working to generate positive search-engine results for Epstein following his 2008 conviction for child-sex crimes.

Earlier, Democrats had released documents that included an especially cryptic email from Epstein to Maxwell โ€” one that mentions Trump by name, and refers to an unnamed victim of Epsteinโ€™s trafficking network. The email read:

โ€œI want you to realize that that dog that hasn’t barked is Trump,โ€ Epstein wrote on April 2, 2011.
โ€œ[VICTIM] spent hours at my house with himโ€ฆhe has never once been mentioned. Police chief. etc. I’m 75% there.โ€

Officials later identified the โ€œunnamed victimโ€ as well-known Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre, who died by suicide earlier this year. Giuffre repeatedly stated that Trump was not involved in wrongdoing and โ€œcouldnโ€™t have been friendlierโ€ to her in their limited interactions. The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, responded:

โ€œThe fact remains that President Trump kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of his club decades ago for being a creep to his female employees, including Giuffre.โ€

In his own post on Truth Social, Trump weighed in:

โ€œThe Democrats cost our Country $1.5 Trillion Dollars with their recent antics of viciously closing our Country, while at the same time putting many at risk โ€” and they should pay a fair price,โ€ he wrote.
โ€œThere should be no deflections to Epstein or anything else, and any Republicans involved should be focused only on opening up our Country, and fixing the massive damage caused by the Democrats!โ€

As a reminder: Epstein secured a highly-controversial so-called โ€œsweetheartโ€ deal in 2008 for child-sex crimes. He was arrested again in 2019 on more serious trafficking charges โ€” but died before the case went to trial. Maxwell was convicted of grooming and procuring girls and young women for Epstein; she is appealing and continues to assert her innocence.


Key Takeaways for a Republican Audience

  • The timing of the document releases and allegations of selective leaking by Democrats raises questions about political motive and media stratagem.
  • The correspondence shows efforts to frame Epsteinโ€™s narrative around Trump โ€” part of a broader attempt to tie the story to the 2016 presidential election and cast Trump in a negative light.
  • Trumpโ€™s defenders argue the documents reinforce his long-standing disassociation from Epstein, as well as serve to remind voters of Democratsโ€™ role in political maneuvering, rather than holding criminals accountable.
  • For Republicans focused on institutional integrity and media accountability, the episode reinforces concerns about selective exposure of documents, agenda-driven leaks, and manipulation of public perception.

Trump Ups The Ante On Imminent BBC Lawsuit

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Tyler Merbler, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

President Donald Trump is threatening to sue the BBC for at least $1 billion, accusing the British broadcaster of defamation after it aired a misleadingly edited clip in its pre-election documentary, โ€œTrump: A Second Chance?โ€

The film, which aired ahead of the November 2024 election, includes footage from Trumpโ€™s January 6, 2021 โ€œStop the Stealโ€ rally, just before Congress certified Joe Bidenโ€™s 2020 victory. The BBCโ€™s version of Trumpโ€™s remarks spliced together two separate parts of his speech to make it appear more inflammatory.

The documentary quoted Trump as saying:

โ€œWeโ€™re going to walk down to the Capitol, and Iโ€™ll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.โ€

However, in reality, Trumpโ€™s words were more measured. He told supporters:

โ€œWeโ€™re going to walk down, and Iโ€™ll be there with you, weโ€™re going to walk down, weโ€™re going to walk down. Anyone you want, but I think right here, weโ€™re going to walk down to the Capitol, and weโ€™re going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women, and weโ€™re probably not going to be cheering so much for some of them. Because youโ€™ll never take back our country with weakness.โ€

He continued:

โ€œYou have to show strength, and you have to be strong. We have come to demand that Congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated.โ€

Trump also explicitly called for peaceful protest, adding:

โ€œI know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.โ€

It wasnโ€™t until about an hour later in his remarks that Trump said the second part of the BBCโ€™s edited clip:

โ€œAnd we fight. We fight like hell. And if you donโ€™t fight like hell, youโ€™re not going to have a country anymore.โ€

BBC Leaders Step Down Amid Backlash

The controversy was first exposed by The Daily Telegraph, which published an internal BBC memo acknowledging the editing issue. Following the uproar, BBC Director-General Tim Davie and BBC News CEO Deborah Turness both resigned.

In a message to staff, Turness admitted that โ€œmistakes have been madeโ€ but denied claims that the BBC is โ€œinstitutionally biased.โ€

Trumpโ€™s Legal Response

Trumpโ€™s attorney, Alejandro Britt, sent the BBC a legal letter demanding a full apology and retraction. The letter accuses the broadcaster of โ€œdefrauding the publicโ€ and misrepresenting Trumpโ€™s words to paint him in a negative light.

โ€œWell, I guess I have to,โ€ Trump told Fox Newsโ€™s Laura Ingraham on Tuesday, confirming his intent to sue. โ€œWhy not? Because they defrauded the public, and theyโ€™ve admitted it.โ€

A Pattern of Media Accountability

This is not the first time the President has successfully taken on major media outlets.

Last year, ABC News settled with Trump for $15 million after anchor George Stephanopoulos falsely claimed on-air that Trump was found civilly liable for rape in the E. Jean Carroll case. The jury had, in fact, found him liable only for sexual abuse.

In July 2024, Trump won another $16 million settlement from Paramount, following claims that a โ€œ60 Minutesโ€ interview with Kamala Harris was heavily edited to favor her during the election season.

Trump also has an ongoing $10 billion lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal, accusing it of defamation after it published a supposed birthday note he allegedly wrote to Jeffrey Epsteinโ€”a note Trump denies ever writing.