Justice Department opens the vault on Epstein files
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Justice Department expected to ramp up efforts to deliver on Trump’s ‘weaponization’ priorities
Justice Department officials are expected to meet Monday to discuss how to reenergize probes that are considered a top priority for President Donald Trump — reviewing the actions of officials who investigated him,
(This Jan 31 story has been repeated with no changes to the text) By Nate Raymond Jan 31 (Reuters) - A federal appeals court judge has dismissed a judicial misconduct complaint by U.S. Justice Department against a judge who clashed with President Donald Trump's administration over its move to deport several Venezuelans to El Salvador.
Leading Democrats' remarks that the U.S. Department of Justice cannot be trusted hold stunning implications for American democracy, and followed a week of equally stunning actions by the department.
The US Department of Justice says it did not alter any files to protect President Donald Trump when it released documents relating to the scandal involving the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Nothing was withheld for that reason, Deputy Attorney General ...
In a statement accompanying Friday's file dump, which includes over 2,000 videos and 180,000 images, the Justice Department said: 'Some of the documents contain untrue and sensationalist claims against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election.
Survivors of Epstein as well as lawmakers criticized the latest release as insufficient and marred by redaction failures.
Blanche said that redaction errors only impact "about .001% of all the materials." Latest release of Epstein files includes some survivors' names, despite DOJ assurances, lawyers