Trump hit by MAGA backlash as Justice Dept's Epstein U-turn sparks outrage

Move marks first time Trump's officials publicly scotched stories, pushed by numerous right-wing figures

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AFP
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Reuters
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US Attorney General Pam Bondi attends a press conference at the Justice Department in Washington, DC, US, April 16, 2025. — Reuters
US Attorney General Pam Bondi attends a press conference at the Justice Department in Washington, DC, US, April 16, 2025. — Reuters

  • Justice Dept finds no evidence of Epstein's client list or blackmail
  • Conservatives slam Attorney General Bondi and FBI Director Patel.
  • Trump defends Patel, Bongino amid backlash from MAGA backers.


President Donald Trump's Justice Department scrambled on Tuesday to answer questions after its leadership concluded there was no evidence to support several long-held conspiracy theories about the death of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and his alleged clientele, drawing ire from supporters.

Conservative influencers from Laura Loomer to Elon Musk have criticised Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel for their findings, which came months after Bondi pledged to reveal major revelations about Epstein, including "a lot of names" and "a lot of flight logs."

"It's sitting on my desk right now to review," Bondi told Fox News in February when she was asked if the Justice Department would be releasing Epstein's client list.

On Tuesday at the White House, Bondi walked that comment back, telling reporters that she was referring to the entire Epstein "file" along with other files about the assassinations of John F Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. "That's what I meant by that," she said.

She added that many of the videos in the Epstein investigative file "turned out to be child porn." This material, she added, is "never going to be released. Never going to see the light of day."

The Justice Department's memo on Epstein, released on Monday, concluded that after reviewing more than 300 gigabytes of data, there was "no incriminating client list", nor was there any evidence that Epstein may have blackmailed prominent people.

The memo also confirmed prior findings by the FBI, which concluded that Epstein died by suicide in his jail cell while awaiting trial, and not as a result of a criminal act such as murder.

A subsequent report by the Justice Department's inspector general later found that the Bureau of Prisons employees who were tasked with guarding Epstein failed to search his cell or check on him in the hours before his suicide.

Patel and FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, a former conservative podcaster, both previously made statements before working at the FBI about a so-called client list and often suggested that the government was hiding information about Epstein from the American public.

Trump defended them in a Truth Social Post on Monday amid a backlash by his MAGA base, calling them the "greatest law enforcement professionals."

He expressed annoyance when reporters asked him questions about Epstein on Tuesday at the White House during a cabinet meeting, saying, "Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?"

It marks the first time Trump's officials had publicly scotched the stories, pushed by numerous right-wing figures, notably including the FBI's top two officials before Trump hired them.

The backlash was swift and brutal from his "Make America Great Again" movement, which has long held as an article of faith that "Deep State" elites were protecting Epstein's most powerful associates in the Democratic Party and Hollywood.

"Next the DOJ will say 'Actually, Jeffrey Epstein never even existed,'" furious pro-Trump conspiracy theorist Alex Jones tweeted. 

"This is over the top sickening."

Trump has managed to avoid much of the direct blame over the fiasco, with ire instead being directed at FBI director Kash Patel and his deputy Dan Bongino.