AG Palm Bondi told Donald Trump that his name appeared in Epstein files

Attorney General Palm Bondi informed President Trump in the spring that his name appeared in Jeffrey Epstein files, according to three people according to the knowledge of the exchange.The disclosure came as a part of a broad briefing on the re -briefing of the case against Epstein, who died in 2019 waiting to prosecute allegations of sex trafficking. It was built by Bondi during a meeting which included Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanches, and a variety of subjects were included. Officials said Bandi often meets Trump to abbreviate on various cases.Both Bondi and Blanche first served as lawyers for Trump, informing the President that his name, as well as other high-profile figures, had come in the revaluation of documents associated with the case which were not made public earlier. It is not clear how important Trump’s references are. But briefing highlights the private waste wing discussions in an instant when the President’s team is trying hard to carry forward the rebellion and rebel among the Trump supporters that feel that he – and some of his senior appointments – wandered them with claims that they would provide files. White House Communications Director Steven Chewing would not solve questions about briefing, but called any suggestion that Trump Epstein was engaged in wrongdoing related to “fake news”.Trump earlier denied that Bondi had told him that he was in the files. According to administration officials, the week of June 7, the White House received an inquiry from ABC News about May briefing. A week later, an ABC journalist asked Trump if Bondi told him that his name had appeared in the files. He replied, “No, no,” and said that he told them about the “reliability” of various things in the files. He claimed that he included materials manufactured by Democrats. The conversation between Trump and Bondi and Blanches was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. Bandy is also facing a democratic call to testify before the Congress about the revelation. Senator Adam Shif, a California Democrat, responded to the report by calling Bondi and FBI chief Kash Patel to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee.