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Vance says Trump has been ‘incredibly transparent' on Epstein files: ‘We're not shielding anything'

Vance says Trump has been ‘incredibly transparent' on Epstein files: ‘We're not shielding anything'

The Hill6 days ago
Vice President Vance defended the Trump administration's handling of the files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein during a press conference in Canton, Ohio, after an appearance to promote the 'big, beautiful bill.'
'The president has been very clear. We're not shielding anything,' Vance said in response to a question from a reporter. 'He's been incredibly transparent about that stuff, but some of that stuff takes time.'
The furor from the MAGA base over Epstein put Vance, who has in the past entertained conspiracy theories about the convicted sex offender, in a tricky position after the FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) released a memo maintaining that the disgraced financier died by suicide.
Vance reportedly served as a mediator between Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino after Bongino aired quitting the week the memo was released. But he otherwise largely stayed quiet as the administration tried to contain the fallout.
Now, several weeks later, the MAGA-verse's focus on the issue has abated, despite multiple reports from The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal about Trump's ties to Epstein — findings the president has strenuously denied.
The president's attempt to have grand jury transcripts about Epstein unsealed was also defeated in Florida last week, although a ruling has yet to be made in Epstein's criminal case in New York.
In Ohio, Vance attempted to pin blame on anyone but the president.
'For four years, under Joe Biden's Department of Justice, the media didn't give a damn about the Epstein files or about the Epstein case,' he said. He also blamed the Bush and Obama administrations for not 'fully' investigating the case.
'Donald J. Trump, I'm telling you, he's got nothing to hide,' he said.
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The first victim to testify in Ghislaine Maxwell's 2021 sex trafficking trial told the jury that she was a 13-year-old, eating ice cream with her friends, when a tall woman with a small dog approached three decades before. 'She was walking with a cute little Yorkie,' the victim, identified only as Jane, recalled of that first encounter at Interlochen summer arts camp in 1994. 'We asked if we could pet the dog. We started chitchatting, petted the dog. And the rest of my classmates had to go to class. And probably about a minute later, a man came and joined her.' The woman was Ghislaine Maxwell and her Yorkie was named Max. The man was Jeffrey Epstein. He and Maxwell were commencing a classic scheme to groom and sexually prey on an unsuspecting girl. One enduring question is how he came to acquire such a perfect target; a grieving child made vulnerable by the loss of a parent and her home. 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'And they would sort of name-drop or sometimes put people on speakerphones whose voices I didn't know and then say, Oh, well, this was so-and-so and so-and-so; and just, you know, say that they were very well-connected and affluent.' Moe asked Jane how that made her feel. 'I guess it made me feel slightly intimidated,' she replied. 'It was overwhelming… I didn't know how I was supposed to feel about it.' 'What names do you recall them mentioning to you when they would tell you about their social circle?' Moe asked. The first name Jane mentioned was one that she would cite three times while on the stand, twice more than any other celebrity. 'Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Mike Wallace,' she said. Under cross-examination, Jane testified that Epstein had subsequently introduced her to Trump in person at Mar-a-Lago in December of 1994. A 2020 civil suit that Jane would later file against the Epstein estate and its executors would later allege, 'Introducing 14-year-old [Jane] to Donald J. Trump, Epstein elbowed Trump playfully asking him, referring to [Jane], 'This is a good one, right?' Trump smiled and nodded in agreement. They both chuckled and [Jane} felt uncomfortable, but, at the time, was too young to understand why." Trump later told New York Magazine, 'I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it—Jeffrey enjoys his social life.' That social life included dropping by Mar-a-Lago with a girl in her early teens whom Epstein's driver, Juan Alessi, recalled from the stand as a 'strikingly beautiful girl, beautiful eyes, long hair.' Jane mentioned Trump a third time in her testimony when she confirmed that she later competed in the Miss Teen USA contest. 'In the mid-1990s, you participated in a beauty pageant, correct?' Messenger asked. 'Embarrassingly enough, ' Jane replied. 'Yes.' 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On Tuesday, Trump confirmed to reporters that the people Epstein 'stole' included Virginia Giuffre, who worked at Mar-a-Lago as a $9 an hour locker room attendant in 2000. She testified in a subsequent civil case that she was 17 when she met Maxwell there. Giuffre further alleged that Maxwell and Epstein groomed her in much the way they did Jane. One difference was that Giuffre says the groomers turned to pimps, farming her out to Prince Andrew. After Jane and three other victims testified against Maxwell, she was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. She still faced two counts of perjury for particularly egregious lies she allegedly told during a civil case arising from the civil case involving the sexual assault. The DOJ decided to drop those charges to save the victims from undergoing the trauma of further proceedings. But the renewed contention over the supposed Epstein files is doing exactly that. And it is accompanied by the possibility that Trump may grant clemency to a well-heeled, Oxford-educated socialite monster who teamed up with Epstein to ensnare Jane and Giuffre and other unsuspecting girls. Giuffre lost her life by suicide in April. Jane received a payment from the Epstein Victims Compensation Fund in a 2021 agreement that required her to drop the civil suit against the estate. It had not replied to her claims. She had already embarked on a long career as a working actor. Her attorney did not respond to requests to speak with her. But she no doubt still feels the effects of what followed after the tall woman with the little dog approached her at summer camp. 'Can you explain for the jury how what Maxwell and Epstein did to you affected your relationships as an adult?' Moe asked Jane during the trial about crimes that an early tip-off could have prevented and has resonated through decades. 'I didn't even understand what real love is supposed to look like. 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Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was quietly transferred from a federal prison in Florida to a federal prison in Texas, according to a Bureau of Prisons official. 'Ghislaine Maxwell is in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) at the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Bryan, Texas,' BOP official Benjamin O'Cone confirmed Friday in an email to The Hill. The move to Texas comes as Maxwell, who was convicted of sex trafficking and is serving a 20-year prison sentence, and her legal team are appealing her case to the Supreme Court in hopes of having her conviction overturned. Last week, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee subpoenaed Maxwell, asking for her testimony as the demand for President Trump's administration to release more documents related to Epstein's case continues. Maxwell's attorney, David Oscar Markus, said her client would only speak to the committee if granted immunity, something the panel rejected. Markus also asked for the questions directed to Maxwell to be submitted in advance and that any potential deposition be held after the nation's highest court weighs in on her petition. The Justice Department's (DOJ) No. 2 official, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, spoke with Maxwell in Florida last week for more than nine hours over the course of two days. The Trump administration has faced a backlash after an early-July joint memo from the DOJ and FBI said that Epstein, a convicted sex offender and disgraced financier, died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial in jail and that he did not keep a 'client list.' The news of Maxwell's transfer was first reported by The New York Sun. Federal Prison Camp Bryan is a minimum-security jail for female inmates and will likely offer better conditions for Maxwell. The facility is located around 95 miles northwest of Houston and can hold up to 635 inmates. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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