In a shocking and unscripted moment outside the White House on Tuesday morning, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed what many have long feared: the federal government is still sitting on an overwhelming trove of horrifying evidence tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s global trafficking and blackmail operation.
Speaking to reporters following an announcement about a major fentanyl bust, Bondi was asked about rumors that the FBI has yet to release the full scope of Epstein-related files. She didn’t hesitate.
“The FBI, they’re reviewing. There are tens of thousands of videos of Epstein with children or child porn. And there are hundreds of victims,” Bondi said.
Let that sink in—tens of thousands of videos. That means the scale of Epstein’s operation wasn’t just massive—it was industrial. It also raises questions about who else may have been caught on those tapes and whether anyone other than Ghislaine Maxwell has faced true justice.
According to Bondi, the highly sensitive nature of the material—many of the videos showing victims in the act of being abused—means they may never be released to the public. While that’s understandable in terms of victim protection, it also fuels suspicions that powerful figures caught up in Epstein’s web are being shielded.
“No one victim will ever get released,” Bondi added. “It’s just the volume, and that’s what they’re going through right now. The FBI is diligently going through that.”
But Bondi hasn’t always been satisfied with the Bureau’s cooperation. In February, she sent a scathing letter to the FBI Director after learning that thousands of pages of Epstein-related documents had been withheld from her office—despite repeated assurances that all files had been turned over. These were reportedly held at the FBI’s New York field office, the same division now under scrutiny for years of politically charged mishandling of high-profile cases.
The revelations add fresh urgency to the question: Who is the FBI protecting?
This comes amid growing frustration among victims’ advocates, especially following the tragic death of Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein’s most prominent accusers. Bondi previously hinted that additional criminal charges may be coming and emphasized the need to hold individuals accountable.
With Bondi turning up the heat and the evidence mountain growing by the day, the Epstein case is far from over. And if justice is ever going to be served, now is the time to shine a light into the darkest corners of this scandal.
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