
Trump says ‘credible' Epstein files should be released amid MAGA revolt
Trump said on Tuesday that US Attorney General Pam Bondi should disclose 'whatever she thinks is credible' about the government's investigations into Epstein as he sought to quash a growing backlash on the political right.
'She's handled it very well, and it's going to be up to her,' Trump, who last week encouraged supporters to move on from the case, told reporters at the White House in Washington, DC.
'Whatever she thinks is credible, she should release.'
Trump also claimed the so-called Epstein films were 'made up' by former US Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden and former FBI director James Comey, despite his administration's role in publicising their existence.
Trump later on Tuesday repeated his support for the release of 'credible' information, even as he expressed disbelief over the continuing fascination with the 'sordid' but 'boring' case.
'Credible information – let them give it,' he said. 'I would say anything that's credible, let them have it.'
Trump's Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement has been up in arms since the release of a law enforcement memo last week that concluded that Epstein died by suicide and there was no credible evidence that he possessed a 'client list' or blackmailed powerful figures.
Epstein, who died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while facing sex trafficking charges, has for years been the source of lurid theories and speculation, including that he was murdered and used sexual blackmail to compromise powerful figures on behalf of intelligence agencies.
Theorising about Epstein has been particularly frenzied in MAGA circles, which campaigned for Trump's re-election in the belief he would expose the full extent of the late financier's crimes and those of his elite connections.
Since the release of the joint US Department of Justice and FBI memo contradicting the most popular theories about Epstein, prominent MAGA followers have accused the Trump administration of breaking its promises and joining a cover-up aimed at protecting Epstein's associates, possibly including the president himself.
'I want to make this very clear to those on the right, including the president himself, who are telling us to just drop the subject and move on,' conservative commentator Matt Walsh said on his podcast.
'We can't drop it. We can't move on.'
Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, on Tuesday became the most powerful Trump ally yet to add to his voice to calls for greater transparency.
'We should put everything out there and let the people decide,' Johnson said in an interview with conservative commentator Benny Johnson, adding that Bondi needed to 'come forward and explain it to everybody'.
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Al Jazeera
3 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
How US dealt with the cases of nine Americans killed by Israel since 2022
Washington, DC – The family of Sayfollah Musallet, the United States citizen who was beaten to death by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank last week, is calling for justice. Musallet's relatives want Washington to launch its own investigation into the incident to ensure accountability. The Florida-born 20-year-old is the ninth US citizen to be killed by Israeli settlers or soldiers since 2022. None of the previous cases have led to criminal charges or US sanctions against the perpetrators. That lack of response is what advocates call a 'pattern of impunity', wherein Washington demands a probe without placing any significant pressure on Israel to produce results. In Musallet's case, the administration of President Donald Trump urged Israel to 'aggressively' investigate the killing. 'There must be accountability for this criminal and terrorist act,' Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, said in a statement on Tuesday. It is not clear if the US has taken any further actions to seek justice in the aftermath of the fatal beating. Critics say the 'pattern of impunity' stems in part from the historically close bonds between the US and Israel. Successive presidential administrations in the US have affirmed their 'unwavering' support for Israel, and the US provides Israel with billions of dollars in military aid annually. Here, Al Jazeera looks at who the eight other victims were, how the US has responded to their killing and where their cases stand. Omar Assad Assad, a 78-year-old Palestinian American, was driving home in the occupied West Bank after visiting friends on January 12, 2022, when Israeli soldiers stopped him at a checkpoint. According to the autopsy report and his family's account, the troops dragged Assad out of his car and then handcuffed, gagged and blindfolded him, leaving him to die at a cold construction site. The administration of then-President Joe Biden called on Israel to launch a criminal investigation into the incident. But Assad's relatives and lawmakers from his home state of Milwaukee wanted Washington to conduct its own probe – a demand that never materialised. As is often the case, Israel's investigation into its own soldiers' conduct did not lead to any criminal charges. In 2023, the Israeli army said that it found no 'causal link' between the way its soldiers treated Assad and his death. The Biden administration also declined to apply sanctions under US law to the Israeli unit that killed Assad: the Netzah Yehuda, a battalion notorious for its abuses against Palestinians in the West Bank. Last year, the US Department of State announced that the battalion will still be eligible for US aid under the Leahy Law, which prohibits military assistance for security units involved in human rights violations. Shireen Abu Akleh Abu Akleh, a veteran Al Jazeera reporter, was fatally shot by Israeli forces during a raid in Jenin in the occupied West Bank on May 11, 2022. Owing to her status as one of the most celebrated journalists in the Middle East, her killing sparked international outrage from rights groups and press freedom advocates. Despite the global attention, Israeli forces attacked her funeral in Jerusalem, beating the pallbearers carrying her coffin with batons. Israel initially denied killing Abu Akleh, 51, falsely claiming that the reporter was shot by armed Palestinians. Months later, after multiple visual investigations showed that Israeli soldiers targeted Abu Akleh, Israel acknowledged that its forces likely killed the reporter, dismissing the incident as an accident. The Biden administration faced waves of pleas by legislators and rights groups to launch its own investigation into the killing, but it resisted the calls, arguing that Israel is capable of investigating itself. In November 2022, Israeli media reports claimed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was investigating the shooting of Abu Akleh, but the US Department of Justice never confirmed the probe. More than three years after Abu Akleh's killing, her family and supporters say justice in her case has not been served. Tawfiq Ajaq Born in Louisiana, Ajaq was 17 when he visited the occupied West Bank to see his relatives last year. On January 19, 2024, he was driving a pick-up truck with his friends when Israelis sprayed the vehicle with bullets and killed him. Mohammed Salameh, who witnessed and survived the attack, said the shooting was unprovoked. While it is not clear which individual shot Ajaq, Israel said the incident involved 'an off-duty law enforcement officer, a soldier and a civilian' and was sparked by 'rock-throwing activities' – a claim that Salameh has denied. The US State Department called for an 'urgent investigation to determine the circumstance' of the incident. But more than 19 months after the shooting, Israel has not publicly released any findings or charged any suspect in the shooting. 'We feel abandoned by our government,' Ajaq's uncle, Mohammad Abdeljabbar, told Al Jazeera last year. Mohammad Khdour Khdour was also 17 when he was killed under almost identical circumstances to Ajaq just weeks later. According to his cousin Malek Mansour, who witnessed the attack, an unidentified assailant opened fire at their car in the occupied West Bank from a vehicle with an Israeli number plate. Mansour said the attack was unprovoked. Khdour died on February 10, 2024. The two had been eating cookies and taking selfies moments before the shooting. Once again, Washington called for a probe. 'There needs to be an investigation. We need to get the facts. And if appropriate, there needs to be accountability,' then-Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters at that time. But advocates say that, while normally Israel launches sham investigations into such incidents, Israeli authorities have not acknowledged Khdour's killing at all. The Israeli military and police told the publication Haaretz last year that they are not familiar with the case. Jacob Flickinger An Israeli air strike targeted a World Central Kitchen (WCK) vehicle in Gaza on April 1, 2024, killing seven aid workers, sparking anger and condemnation across the world. Among the victims was Flickinger, a 33-year-old US-Canadian dual citizen. Biden called for a 'swift' Israeli investigation into the attack, which he said 'must bring accountability'. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the blast a 'tragic accident'. The Israeli military said the commander who ordered the strike had 'mistakenly assumed' that gunmen in the area were in the aid vehicle. It added that the commander did not identify the car as associated with World Central Kitchen, a well-known hunger relief initiative founded by celebrity chef Jose Andres. A World Central Kitchen logo was displayed prominently on the top of the vehicle before the attack. Israel said it dismissed two commanders over the incident, but there were no criminal charges. Since then, Israel has killed hundreds of aid workers in Gaza, including Palestinian staff members from World Central Kitchen. Last year, the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant for using starvation as a weapon of war in Gaza as well as other alleged war crimes. Aysenur Ezgi Eygi Eygi, born in Washington state, was participating in a protest against an illegal settler outpost in the West Bank on September 6, 2024, when an Israeli soldier shot her in the head. She was 26. While there were reports of a scuffle during a crackdown on the demonstration by Israeli forces, several witnesses have said that Eygi was shot during a calm period after the chaos had ended. The State Department called on Israel to 'quickly and robustly' investigate Eygi's killing, but it ruled out conducting its own probe. Biden dismissed her death as an 'accident', but Blinken condemned it as 'unprovoked and unjustified'. On the same day that Eygi was fatally shot by Israel, the US Justice Department filed charges against Hamas leaders after the killing of US-Israeli captive Hersh Goldberg-Polin in Gaza. The Israeli military said its soldiers likely killed Eygi 'indirectly and unintentionally' – a conclusion that her family called offensive, stressing that she was targeted by a sniper. 'The disregard shown for human life in the inquiry is appalling,' the family said in a statement. Trump ally Randy Fine, now a Congress member, celebrated the killing of Eygi. 'One less #MuslimTerrorist,' he wrote in a social media post, referring to the shooting. Kamel Jawad When Jawad, a celebrated leader in the Lebanese American community in Michigan, was killed by an Israeli air strike in south Lebanon on October 1 of last year, the Biden administration initially denied he was a US citizen. Washington later acknowledged that Jawad was American, expressing 'alarm' over his killing. 'As we have noted repeatedly, it is a moral and strategic imperative that Israel take all feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm. Any loss of civilian life is a tragedy,' the US State Department said at that time. Israel has not commented publicly on the strike that killed Jawad. The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) slammed the Biden administration's handling of the case, including the US government's initial 'smug' response. 'It's as if they're intentionally trying to see our people killed, intentionally downplaying us and dehumanising us,' ADC executive director Abed Ayoub told Al Jazeera last year. Amer Rabee On April 6, Israeli forces in the West Bank fatally shot 14-year-old Rabee, a New Jersey native, and called him a 'terrorist'. Two of his friends were also injured in the attack. While the Israeli military accused Rabee and his friends of throwing rocks at Israeli vehicles, the slain teenager's family insisted that he was picking almonds on the side of the road. The Trump administration failed to pursue accountability in the case or even publicly press for further details about the incident. Instead, the State Department cited the Israeli account about the 14-year-old's killing. 'We offer our sincerest condolences to the family on their loss,' the State Department said at that time. 'We acknowledge the [Israeli military's] initial statement that expressed that this incident occurred during a counter-terrorism operation.'


Al Jazeera
3 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
US labels the group accused of Pahalgam attack a ‘terrorist' organisation
The United States has designated the group The Resistance Front (TRF) a 'foreign terrorist organisation' following an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 people in April. In a statement on Thursday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that TRF is an offshoot of the group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and has taken credit for the attack in the resort town of Pahalgam, as well as several assaults on Indian security forces. Rubio also touted the sanctions as evidence of President Donald Trump's firm approach to foreign policy. 'These actions taken by the Department of State demonstrates the Trump Administration's commitment to protecting our national security interests, countering terrorism, and enforcing President Trump's call for justice for the Pahalgam attack,' the State Department said in a statement. TRF initially claimed responsibility for the bloody attack in Pahalgam but reversed course several days later and denied involvement. The nationalist government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi quickly seized on the attack, blaming neighbouring Pakistan for the massacre and accusing it of supporting militant groups that carry out attacks on Indian security forces and civilians. Several members of LeT carried out a multiday attack in Mumbai in 2008 that killed more than 160 people and injured hundreds more. In his statement, Rubio called the Pahalgam attack, in which militants targeted a popular tourist destination in Kashmir, 'the deadliest attack on civilians in India since the 2008 Mumbai attacks conducted by LeT'. While Pakistan is widely considered to have supported such groups as a form of undermining India, the latter's harsh military rule and record of human rights abuses in Kashmir have long been sources of discontent and sometimes violent resistance in the territory. Hindu nationalists have sought greater control over Kashmir, the only Muslim-majority province under Indian rule. After the Pahalgam attack in April, India and Pakistan exchanged a series of blows before agreeing to a truce that President Trump claimed credit for helping to broker, though India has denied US mediation.


Al Jazeera
4 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
US House sends crypto ‘GENIUS Act' to Trump, in win for industry advocates
The United States House of Representatives has passed three bills related to cryptocurrency, sending one directly to US President Donald Trump and the other two to the US Senate. The votes by the Republican-controlled chamber come amid a wider push by the Trump administration to make the US the 'crypto capital of the world', in what the president has dubbed 'crypto week'. Trump and his family's emphasis on the largely unregulated crypto industry has also raised concerns it could be used to mask corruption and foreign influence. The bill that will go directly to Trump is called the GENIUS Act. It sets initial guardrails and consumer protections for a cryptocurrency known as stablecoins, which are tied to 'stable' assets like the US dollar to reduce their volatility. House Financial Services Chair French Hill said during debate on Thursday that the bill will 'ensure American competitiveness and strong guardrails for our consumers'. 'Around the world, payment systems are undergoing a revolution,' he said. The legislation passed in the Senate and by a 308-122 vote in the House. It garnered bipartisan support in both chambers. A second bill would create a new market structure for cryptocurrency. It passed by a slimmer margin of 294-134 and will need to go to the Senate, where lawmakers could craft a new version. That legislation aims to provide clarity for how digital assets are regulated, mostly by defining what forms of cryptocurrency should be treated as commodities regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and which are securities policed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Commodities are typically considered goods that can be traded or sold, while securities, like stocks and bonds, typically refer to partial ownership of an asset. A third bill, passed by a narrower 219-210 margin, would prohibit the US from offering what's known as a 'central bank digital currency', essentially a government-issued form of digital cash. It will also head to the Senate. Trump's crypto interests Cryptocurrencies, which are unmoored from any central government authority, have exploded in popularity since first emerging in 2009. But experts have said US operations have been curtailed by unclear laws governing the industry. Advocates have said the bills passed on Thursday could help to hearken in more mainstream adoption. Still, Democrats critical of the GENIUS bill accused Republicans of fast-tracking the passage, while failing to address Trump and future presidents' interests in cryptocurrency. For example, a provision in the bill bans members of Congress and their families from profiting off stablecoins. That prohibition does not extend to the president and his family. Trump's family holds a significant stake in World Liberty Financial, a crypto project that launched its own stablecoin, USD1. Trump reported earning $57.35m from token sales at World Liberty Financial in 2024, according to a public financial disclosure released in June. A meme coin linked to him has also generated an estimated $320m in fees, though the earnings are split among multiple investors. 'No one should be surprised that these same Republicans' next order of business is to validate, legitimise, and endorse the Trump family's corruption and efforts to sell the White House to the highest bidder,' Representative Maxine Waters, the top Democrat on the House Financial Services panel, said amid the flurry of votes on Thursday. Since taking office, Trump has also proposed creating a cryptocurrency 'national reserve' and has suspended Department of Justice investigations related to cryptocurrency. Some Democrats also criticised the GENIUS bill for creating what they called an overly weak regulatory framework that could pose longterm financial risks. They also say the legislation opens the door for major corporations to issue their own private cryptocurrencies.