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Senate Democrats have escalated their push for transparency in the Jeffrey Epstein case. Citing a little-known federal law ...
Trump’s comments expanded on remarks he made a day earlier when he said he banned Epstein from his private club two decades ...
A former Republican congressman bashed Mike Johnson (R-LA) on Wednesday night over the House speaker's latest "lies." Former ...
The siblings of one of Jeffrey Epstein’s most prominent accusers were shocked that the president referred to her as “stolen.” ...
The grand jury transcripts in Jeffrey Epstein’s and Ghislaine Maxwell’s criminal cases — which the Trump administration is ...
U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood is hailing this week's announcement of a trade agreement with the European Union and recent ones with ...
Senate Democrats are using an arcane procedural tool to try to force the Department of Justice to release additional files ...
The move is part of an effort by Democrats to draw Senate Republicans into the debate over the release of the Epstein files, ...
The Rule of Five, formally known as Section 2954, was first enacted in 1928, establishing a right for lawmakers to access information from the executive branch.
Senate Democrats are attempting to force the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files through a little-known, decades-old law.
The DOJ was responding to judges' requests for further information about its push to unseal grand jury transcripts related to ...
Senate Democrats are using a 1928 law to pressure Trump to release the Epstein files. The White House will ignore them.