Pam Bondi has released another file on the Epstein case, which contains a shocking allegation against Trump.
The US Department of Justice has released FBI interview transcripts of a woman who claims Donald Trump sexually assaulted her when she was a teenager. They were introduced to each other by Jeffrey Epstein, writes Daily Mail.
The woman told agents that Trump hit her after she bit his penis when he tried to force her to perform oral sex.
The FBI interviewed her four times, from August to October 2019, after Epstein's arrest. However, previously released documents contained only a brief summary of one of these interviews.
Last week, the Justice Department said it was reviewing whether records in the Epstein case were improperly withheld after Democrats accused Attorney General Pam Bondi of covering up Trump's sexual assault allegations.
On the subject: 7 Takeaways from the Clintons' Epstein Testimony: What Happened Behind Closed Doors
Bondi received a congressional subpoena on March 4 after Republicans on the House Oversight Committee broke party lines amid growing dissatisfaction with the administration's handling of Epstein files.
Late in the evening of March 5, the agency announced that the documents had been "mislabeled as duplicates," which is why they had been inadvertently not released along with other investigative materials on the disgraced financier. Epstein was found hanged in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
White House press secretary Caroline Leavitt called the allegations against Trump "completely baseless, not supported by any credible evidence," and coming from "a mentally unstable woman with an extensive criminal record."
"The complete groundlessness of these accusations is further confirmed by the obvious fact that the Justice Department under Joe Biden knew about them for four years and did nothing because it knew President Trump had done nothing wrong. As we have repeatedly stated, the release of the Epstein files has completely exonerated President Trump," Leavitt concluded.
A woman contacted the FBI shortly after Epstein's arrest and alleged that a man named Jeff raped her in Hilton Head, South Carolina, in the early 1980s when she was about 13 years old.
She said she didn't know who he was at the time, but decades later, when a friend sent her his photo from a news article, she realized her rapist was Epstein.
In a follow-up interview a month later, the woman made a series of additional allegations: she claimed that Epstein had tried to have her mother jailed, had beaten her, and had arranged sexual encounters with other men.
She said that when she was between 13 and 15, Epstein took her to either New York or New Jersey, where he introduced her to Trump "in a very tall building with huge rooms."
She claimed that Epstein and Trump referred to the girls as "fresh meat" and "untouched."
She said there were other people in the room, but she doesn't remember who they were. Trump asked them to leave, after which he said "something like 'let me show you what little girls should be like,'" according to the interrogation transcript.
She claims Trump unzipped his pants and forced her head onto his penis. She claims she "bite[d] him hard," after which he pulled her hair and hit her on the head.
"Get that little bitch the hell out of here," Trump allegedly said, after which other people reentered the room. The FBI files provide no information about how this episode ended or how the woman left the room.
In an interview, she said she had begun working with lawyers and "wanted to be upfront" about "her future civil suit in case agents considered it a potential conflict of interest."
It's unclear how the FBI's investigation into her allegations concluded. She was not deemed eligible for the Epstein Victim Compensation Program, which has paid out more than 130 compensation payments.
There is no evidence that Epstein ever lived in South Carolina, and no evidence that he and Trump knew each other in 1983—at least four years before Trump himself acknowledged knowing the financier.
Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein.
In January, the Justice Department noted that some documents contained "false and sensational allegations against President Trump that were disclosed to the FBI immediately prior to the 2020 election."
The Trump administration has faced ongoing political challenges since the release of the files began in December after Congress voted overwhelmingly to declassify them.
In late January, the Justice Department announced the release of more than three million documents in the Epstein case, but reports immediately emerged that the victims' identities and names had been revealed, while the defendants' data had been protected.
Following the firing of Department of Homeland Security Director Kristi Noem, Democrats signaled their intention to pressure Bondi. Congressman Jamie Raskin accused her of being a central figure in what he called a "culture of lawlessness and chaos in the office" and a "key player in the Epstein cover-up."
Congressman Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, said Bondi is "the most high-profile member of the Cabinet involved in corruption."
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Bondi and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller "should be next to go." He vowed to pursue this "with the same rigor that led to Kristi Noem's ouster."
On March 5, Congressman Shri Thanedar introduced articles of impeachment against Bondi, accusing her of obstructing the work of Congress and misconduct. However, since Republicans control both houses of Congress, the chances of success are slim.
Pressure is also mounting on Commerce Department Secretary Howard Lutnick, who agreed to testify before the Oversight Committee after the Justice Department released a photo of him taken on Epstein's private island, Little St. James.
Last week, the committee questioned Bill and Hillary Clinton—their most explosive testimony to date. Lawmakers are now seeking to question Bill Gates.
British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking, remains Epstein's only accomplice in prison.
Justice Department officials say they worked to release the materials as quickly as possible within the law while protecting victims.
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Officials said errors were inevitable because of the sheer volume of materials, the large number of lawyers reviewing the documents, and the speed with which the department had to release them.
The agency stated that it reserves the right not to publish documents that could reveal the identities of potential victims, are duplicates, are protected by legal privilege, or are related to an ongoing criminal investigation.
Read also on ForumDaily:
A Russian oligarch and politician who figured in Epstein's files was found dead in Moscow.
Bill Gates admitted he cheated on his wife with Russian women.
Jeffrey Epstein wanted to leave "Pedophile Island" and a huge diamond to a girl from Belarus.
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