Bondi entered the hearing facing pointed questions about the Department of Justice’s handling of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. What followed was not the routine exchange many expected. It was tense, combative, and at times deeply personal.

Massie came prepared with printed documents he said demonstrated major failures in the DOJ’s compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. He displayed an email sent to the Department by attorneys representing victims. That correspondence, he argued, contained confidential information that was later included in a public release.
According to Massie, that release resulted in survivors receiving unwanted contact.
The Kentucky congressman then pivoted to a specific question about Les Wexner. “Are you able to track who it was that obscured Les Wexner’s name as a coconspirator in an FBI document?” he asked.
Bondi responded by noting that Wexner’s name appeared numerous times throughout the broader file release, suggesting no effort was made to conceal him.
Massie fired back: “Yeah, I already told you that. This is where he’s listed as a coconspirator.”
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