National Review Online
Wednesday, July 16, 2025
Attorney General Pam Bondi apparently never heard the
adage about under-promising and over-delivering.
President Trump’s most vociferous media supporters have
been in a full meltdown over the administration’s handling of the Jeffrey
Epstein case, an obsessive focus of MAGA figures over the years. Last week, the
DOJ and FBI put out an
unsigned two-page statement saying that no additional charges would be
filed in the case.
Rather than putting the matter to rest, the memo caused a
political uproar and mutual recriminations among top Trump officials.
Who’s to blame? Everyone who has built vast castles of
fantasy atop the Epstein case, including FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy
Director Dan Bongino prior to assuming their current positions, and especially
Pam Bondi (Trump himself talked of releasing the files on Epstein, but voiced
reservations about ruining lives with “phony stuff”). She hyped Epstein
revelations as AG, by handing out worthless white binders supposedly full of
Epstein files to sundry MAGA influencers and by seemingly saying in a TV interview
that she had an Epstein client list on her desk.
That was grossly self-interested conduct that, of course,
did more to stoke conspiracy theories when shortly afterwards the government
took the position that there was really nothing to see here.
It is natural that there are questions around the Epstein
case, given his hideous crimes, his lenient treatment by the law 20 years ago,
his lavish lifestyle, his association with so many famous and wealthy people,
and his death in jail by suicide before he could stand trial.
This doesn’t mean the wild theories about the case are
justified. There is no evidence that there was any “client list” of those
partaking of Epstein’s crimes. Nor is there serious evidence that Epstein was
murdered, which would have required a Mission Impossible–style operation
to fake his suicide behind bars, or that he was, say, an agent of Mossad. If
the Deep State had to make Epstein go away at the behest of a foreign
government, or rich and powerful people who shared in his crimes, presumably it
wouldn’t have allowed his close associate Ghislaine Maxwell to go to trial,
when she had every incentive to spill her guts about such nefarious high-level
dealings. (She is currently serving 20 years in prison for her involvement in
Epstein’s crimes.)
It’s also hard to believe — if we entertain the
conspiracy theorists further — that Kash Patel and Dan Bongino came into office
and were instantly co-opted by the alleged conspiracy they so long warned
about.
There are now understandable calls for greater transparency. The rules
around grand jury secrecy shouldn’t be broken and care must be taken about
revealing the identities of victims and besmirching the reputations of people
mentioned incidentally in the vast investigative materials. Bondi should have
heeded the DOJ practice of not speaking about cases if charges aren’t going to
be brought, and the offense shouldn’t be compounded. Yet, the documents a judge has ordered released in a civil case
should be made public expeditiously, and it’s hard to understand why other materials related to the case — including the autopsy
report on Epstein — haven’t been released.
President Trump wants the whole thing to go away, and now blames various of his political adversaries for
creating the Epstein files in the first place. If there’s one lesson from this
episode, though, it’s that we need less conspiracy-theorizing rather than more.
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