
Trump administration takes blows from Epstein conspiracy community it once embraced
Figures in the Trump administration have long embraced and even promoted various conspiracy theories, including those swirling around Epstein's death. And they've actively courted influencers and voters who have peddled such matters.
But the administration's pledges to release details about the case that some have suggested were held back by authorities — only to backtrack and conclude he died by suicide — have failed to satisfy those who fervently believe Epstein was killed to cover up his connections with high-powered figures.
Critics say the Trump administration is in a mess of its own making.
'You couldn't try to hurt yourself worse, you couldn't try to discredit the FBI worse than what they've done — Pam Bondi, all of it,' said commentator and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, referring to the attorney general — and nearly coming to tears in a video discussing the matter on Monday morning.
'The current DOJ under Pam Bondi is covering up crimes — very serious crimes, by their own description,' former Fox News host Tucker Carlson said on his show released Tuesday.
The interest in the case has dovetailed with Trump's selection of numerous figures who have fanned the flames of intrigue around his death.
Vice President Vance has mused about how he 'died mysteriously in a jail,' and referenced Epstein's alleged client list, asking in 2021, 'What possible interest would the US government have in keeping Epstein's clients secret? Oh…'
Meanwhile, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, in his past life as a conservative commentator, fueled speculation about his death, saying 'that Jeffrey Epstein story is a big deal, please do not let that story go. Keep your eye on this.'
And at his confirmation hearing, FBI Director Kash Patel vowed to release the Epstein files, saying he would 'make sure the American public knows the full weight of what happened.'
Epstein, accused in several cases of sex trafficking young girls, ran in high-powered circles with figures that included President Trump, former President Clinton, Britain's Prince Andrew and a number of other celebrities and ultra-wealthy individuals. His associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, has been convicted of sex trafficking.
But while Epstein and Maxwell were accused of abusing the victims themselves, the government did not accuse them of supplying victims for others.
The files and evidence under court-ordered seal, the FBI memo released Monday said, 'served only to protect victims and did not expose any additional third-parties to allegations of illegal wrongdoing.'
That assertion enraged those convinced that the duo ran an operation trafficking young girls to high-powered elites.
'So Jeffrey Epstein went to jail for trafficking kids to no one…. BS,' Newsmax host Carl Higbie posted on the social platform X.
And they bristled at Bondi saying Tuesday she has 'no knowledge' of Epstein being a spy or intelligence agent, with provocateur Laura Loomer fuming: 'This is a lie. FBI documents from 2008 prove that Epstein PROVIDED INFORMATION FOR THE FBI 'AS AGREED UPON,'' though the FBI document Loomer quoted and shared did not say Epstein was an intelligence agent.
The quiet rollout of the Monday memo stood in contrast to actions taken by the administration in February, when it invited social media influencers to the White House and gave them binders labeled 'The Epstein Files.' That move sparked backlash because the binders did not contain new revelations, but rather information that has long been public, such as pages from Epstein's address book.
And then in May, Bongino changed his tune, telling Fox News the files were conclusive.
'I've seen the whole file. He killed himself,' Bongino said.
Officials like Bongino are in the awkward position of backtracking after years of highlighting the case and lobbying for the release of information from the sidelines — riling up their viewers and supporters in the process.
Now within the arena, the information on hand doesn't back their assertions — and they also have different considerations they didn't have to weigh when outside of government, such as not accusing people of wrongdoing without bringing charges.
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), who is leading a task force in the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on 'Declassification of Federal Secrets,' such as on the assassination of former President Kennedy, called on the administration to do more.
'The American people deserve to know [the] truth [regarding] Epstein, regardless of who it impacts,' she wrote, adding that there is 'plenty of evidence' Bondi and Patel could release without disclosing information about victims.
'The American people should be free to come to their own conclusions. The Truth will always come out one way or another.'
Bondi sought to play cleanup Tuesday during a Cabinet meeting at the White House, where she was asked about some of the fresh theories spawned by Monday's memo. She explained a one-minute gap in a video from outside Epstein's prison cell released by the Justice Department, saying it was a standard issue where 'every night the video is reset, and every night should have the same minute missing.'
The attorney general defended an interview she did in February in which she said documents were on 'sitting on my desk' to be reviewed related to the Epstein case, asserting she was referring to a variety of files that needed to be reviewed pertaining to Epstein, John F. Kennedy Jr.'s assassination and Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, rather than just simply Epstein's client list.
Bondi added that the thousands of hours of video that were part of the Epstein case turned out to be child pornography and would not be released.
Trump himself expressed exasperation with the focus on Epstein when it came up during the Cabinet meeting.
'Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein? This guy's been talked about for years. You're asking — we have Texas, we have this, we have all of the things. And are people still talking about this guy? This creep? That is unbelievable,' Trump said.
One source close to the White House argued Bongino, in particular, has built up significant goodwill with the MAGA movement, giving him more credibility than figures like Bondi when he speaks about the Epstein case.
'If it were anyone other than Dan saying it, I think there would be a lot more distrust with it,' the source said.
The source downplayed that the frustration on the right over the administration's handling of the issue could be a political liability.
'I don't think it's going to make people go, 'Oh, well, we're not voting for Republicans in the midterm because of what the DOJ has done,'' the source said.
But the incident marks one of the biggest fractures between Trump and his rabid MAGA base — and one they are pledging they will not forget.
'We will continue asking about Epstein,' filmmaker and commentator Mike Cernovich posted in response to Trump scolding a reporter for asking about the disgraced financier.
'Trump is massively misreading his base on this,' conservative commentator Liz Wheeler added.

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San Francisco Chronicle
20 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Trump administration eyes California for new oil and gas drilling — including Bay Area
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The state has increasingly turned to alternative power sources to divorce itself from the problems of oil and gas, which include driving health-harming pollution and climate change as well as disturbing public lands and wildlife. The Sierra Club called the administration's latest actions in the state a 'massive drilling expansion (that) would be a huge loss to Californians.' The places that the federal government is reviewing — and eventually could be leased for oil and gas operations — are specifically lands and underground mineral deposits administered by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's Bakersfield and Central Coast offices. This includes 684,000 acres of land and 959,000 acres of subsurface mineral estate sprinkled across 17 counties, from Contra Costa County in the north to Ventura County in the south. Much of the acreage is in the Central Valley's Kern County, where the Midway-Sunset oil field stands as one of the largest drilling sites in the nation. 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While California was once one of the top oil-extracting states in the nation, production has waned in recent decades, though the state is still among the top 10. Gov. Gavin Newsom has called for phasing out oil drilling entirely by 2045. Environmental and social justice groups oppose the Bureau of Land Management's plans, saying they will stymie the state's progress toward a greener future. 'It's unclear to what extent the floodgates will open,' said Michelle Ghafar, senior attorney for Earthjustice, a nonprofit legal organization that has fought oil and gas development in California. 'But this means new drilling can happen. This moves the state in the exact opposite direction it needs to go.' While the lands that the Bureau of Land Management administers are far-reaching, fossil fuel companies have historically been interested primarily in obtaining leases near existing drill sites, where the necessary infrastructure exists. 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The Central Coast office hopes to complete its review of 10 counties, including one split with the Bakersfield office, next year and submit final plans in 2027. Once the plans are done, and assuming leasing resumes, federal officials are expected to have an easier time permitting new wells because of regulatory rollbacks being advanced by the Trump administration. The rollbacks also apply to new well permits on existing leases. Additionally, the U.S. Interior Department last month rescinded a 2012 memorandum of understanding between the Bureau of Land Management and the state of California that called for sharing regulatory responsibilities on federal lands. Both the state and Bureau of Land Management declined to discuss the MOU's termination, but it's widely viewed as a show of the federal government's interest in taking over, and speeding up, the permit process for wells. 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While Newsom has been a champion of cuts to oil and gas, he's tempered his opposition with calls for a gradual transition to cleaner energy, hoping to limit upheaval to prices, jobs and businesses in the fossil fuel sector. Still, the number of permits issued for new wells has fallen significantly over the past few years, notably on state and private lands where most of California's extraction occurs. Environmental and social justice groups say they want to make sure this trend doesn't cease on federal lands. 'We are really urging BLM not to allow any new land disturbance,' said Victoria Bogdan Tejeda, staff attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity's Climate Law program. 'They do have that power to put constraints on what they do with the land. 'But under the Trump administration,' she said, 'that seems unlikely.'


San Francisco Chronicle
34 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
How the nation's first Asian American legal organization in S.F. is taking on Trump
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According to the Migration Policy Institute, ending birthright citizenship would leave 255,000 children being born in the U.S. without citizenship each year. Winnie Kao, one of the Asian Law Caucus' senior attorneys leading their legal team, fielded panicked questions from clients across the country after Trump signed the executive order. Many of them, particularly those from China and India on work or student visas, feared that their U.S.-born children would lose citizenship or face deportation, Kao said. 'We had community members trying to figure out should they try to induce their pregnancy so that they give birth before the executive order goes into effect,' said Kao, who grew up in the U.S. with Taiwanese parents. 'People asked questions, whether my children would be separated? Could my baby get deported? These are heartbreaking questions.' 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Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump administration sues California over egg prices
The Trump administration has filed a lawsuit against California, alleging that three state laws are contributing to the rising cost of eggs nationwide. 'The State of California has contributed to the historic rise in egg prices by imposing unnecessary red tape on the production of eggs," said the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in central California on July 9. "Through a combination of voter initiatives, legislative enactments, and regulations, California has effectively prevented farmers across the country from using a number of agricultural production methods which were in widespread use — and which helped keep eggs affordable." The lawsuit takes aim at three California laws, Assembly Bill 1437, Proposition 2 and Proposition 12, which create welfare standards for farm animals and regulate egg production. The Trump administration argues that regulating eggs is within the federal government's domain under a 1970 federal law. The administration also contends that the federal law overseeing egg quality and packaging preempts state laws that seek to impose additional requirements on egg production. One California state law, AB 1437, regulates egg quality for human consumption. Prop 2 is a statewide ballot measure California voters passed in 2008 that created welfare mandates for farm animals such as egg-laying hens. The administration argues that the laws work in tandem to depress egg production and to increase prices. A third state law mentioned in the suit, Prop. 12, was passed by voters in 2018, which brought forth specific minimum-space requirements for chickens and other farm animals. Egg prices have been quite volatile this year, with increases of more than 40% due to factors including bird flu outbreaks, which were not mentioned in the Trump administration lawsuit. The average cost for a dozen eggs nationwide was $2.56 per dozen, while in California, egg prices averaged around $3.38 per dozen on July 4, according to the United States Dairy Association (USDA) Markets Overview Report. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) for egg prices in May showed up to a 41% increase compared to one year ago. The next release of the CPI, which includes egg prices, is scheduled for July 15. Justice Dept. sues California again: Trump administration files lawsuit against California over transgender athletes The lawsuit is the latest in a feud and war of words with the state of California and Gov. Gavin Newsom. The suit came on the same day the Department of Justice filed a civil lawsuit against the California Department of Education, alleging that the state is violating anti-discrimination laws by allowing transgender athletes to compete in school sports. The complaint, filed in federal court, alleges that California's current policies "eviscerate equal athletic opportunities for girls" by forcing them to "compete against boys" in state athletic events. A Newsom spokesperson said the state is following a 2013 law and that no court has accepted the legal theory cited by the Trump administration in the suit. In June, Newsom filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the deployment of the National Guard to Los Angeles. President Trump ordered the deployment of 2,000 Guard members to quell demonstrations and violent protests against his immigration crackdown, a move Newsom has called unlawful. Newsom accused Trump of 'inciting and provoking violence,' 'creating mass chaos,' and 'militarizing cities,' and called the president's moves "the act of a dictator." The governor said the decision to sue the Trump administration was due to a "serious breach of state sovereignty" and demanded that the president "return control" to California. How's the president faring?: Where does Trump's approval rating stand after tax bill passes? See the polls U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the egg regulation lawsuit against California is the latest Justice Department action seeking to protect American consumers from predatory commercial practices and regulatory burdens. "Americans across the country have suffered the consequences of liberal policies causing massive inflation for everyday items like eggs," Bondi said in a news release announcing the lawsuit. "Under President Trump's leadership, we will use the full extent of federal law to ensure that American families are free from oppressive regulatory burdens and restore American prosperity." Meanwhile, two animal rights groups have taken exception to the lawsuit. California has prohibited the sale of cruelly produced eggs for more than a decade, a law that has been upheld by the courts, including the Supreme Court, said Sara Amundson, president of Humane World Action Fund. "Blaming 2025 egg prices on these established animal welfare standards shows that this case is about pure politics, not constitutional law," Amundson said in a statement. 'The Trump-led Justice Department is now choosing to ignore voters in red, blue and purple states alike who have rejected the cruelty of confining hens in cages so small they can't even spread their wings. To call these commonsense animal welfare laws a 'regulatory burden' is not just dishonest, it's an insult to millions of Americans.' Due to voter and consumer demand, more than 45% of the U.S. egg industry is already cage free, added Kitty Block, president and CEO of Humane World for Animals. "Rather than accepting this reality, the Department of Justice is using our tax dollars to fight a battle that's already been settled," Block said in a statement. "This is a Justice Department misadventure that ignores the interests of the egg industry, retailers and consumers — all of whom have embraced the cage-free future. Avian influenza and other factors drove up egg prices, not animal welfare laws." The lawsuit against California also names Newsom, California Attorney General Rob Bonta and other state officials as defendants. Newsom's press office took a jab at the lawsuit in a July 9 post on the social media site X, claiming President Trump is "back to his favorite hobby: blaming California for literally everything." "Next up: @CAGovernor Gavin Newsom caused the fall of Rome and sent the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs," the post added. (This story has been updated to add new information.) This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump administration suing California over egg prices