Attorney General Pam Bondy said Monday that federal court submitted “track evidence” to the FBI headquarters in connection with the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Bondi gave the US District Court for the Southern District of New York a deadline for passing information on Feb. 28 to take over information about the pedophile case. She previously accused the Department of Justice of withholding “thousands of pages of documents” related to Epstein ahead of the much-anticipated release of his contact details and flight logs.
“So we got all of them (hopefully all of them) by 8am on Friday,” the Attorney General told Fox News host Sean Hannity, who said “we have thousands of pages of documents.”
“I'm going to get the FBI through them,” Bondi added FBI Director Kash Patel “I'll get a detailed report on why.”
The Attorney General allegedly shocked the limited scope of documents the DOJ had previously obtained from the FBI.
“You're looking at these documents, “All of these are not Epstein files” … and we say, “Where are the rest?”,” Bondy said.
She explained that the “source” informed the DOJ that “all this evidence is sitting in the southern district of New York,” which spurred her to issue deadlines for the district.
“A lot of evidence has arrived,” Bondy said. “It's now owned by the FBI.”
The Attorney General indicated that the victim's name would be released as soon as it was edited.
“We go through it and we go through it as quickly as possible, but we go through it very carefully to protect all the victims of Epstein because there are many victims,” she said.
When forced on the possibility of other types of editing in the mountainous regions of the file, Bondi will lose power whatever is related to “national security” and “will always be confidential.”
However, the Attorney General has asserted that any editorial will be explained to the public.
“If something was edited, you'll know the line, and you'll know why it was edited,” she declared.
Bondi repeated that the “team” that Patel assembled “is as fast as possible” the document “we have the right to know Americans, so they can communicate it to Americans.”
Conservative influencers were aware of the release of DOJ, which died much earlier than last week's public and reporters.
However, there was no major revelation in the Epstein documents, which amounted to about 200 pages. Instead, they list celebrities and politicians who are already known to als with the infamous pedophiles.
