The Supervision Committee of the Representatives Chamber will quote the Department of Justice to release files linked to the case of Financial dishonor Jeffrey Epstein, according to a Committee spokesman, after three Republicans in a subcommittee joined the Democrats to vote on the matter on Wednesday.
The citation “will be issued in the future,” said the spokesman, without providing additional details about the moment.
The next citation follows a group of Republicans in the Federal Subcommittee of Application of the Law that binds to the Democrats in an 8-2 vote to approve a motion of the representative Summer Lee, D-PA., To force the Department of Justice to release files linked to Epstein, a condemned sex criminal who died in prison in 2019.
The citation would request the writing of the names of the victims and any personal identification information. The materials would be internally reviewed by the committee and would not be for public release.
The president of the subcommittee Clay Higgins, R-La., And the representative Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., They were the only votes. Republican representatives Nancy Mace, SC, Scott Perry, Pa., And Brian Jack, Georgia, voted with the Democrats to approve the motion.
The citations will also be issued to former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former FBI directors James Comey and Robert Mueller, and former Attorney General Loretta Lynch, Eric Holder, Merrick Garland, William Barr, Jeff Sessions and Alberto Gonzales as part of the investigation of the investigation of Epstein’s investigation, Cocsppirater Cocsppirator, Cocsilleaine Matillewelleines, Commissiones of the Motisiatres de Esrsein Matillewellea Perry.
Maxwell serves a prison sentence of 20 years after his sentence for federal positions of sex trafficking in 2021.
Earlier on Wednesday, the president of the Chamber Supervision Committee, James Eat, R-Ky., He quoted Maxwell for a statement in the federal correctional institution in Tallahassee, Florida, on August 11, citing “an immense public interest and scrutiny.”
Trump and his Republican allies have tried to blame the Democrats and distract from the storm of fire that surrounds Epstein, despite the fact that Trump’s supporters promoted conspiracy theories linked to Epstein’s death in prison for many years. On the path of the campaign, Trump said “there were no problems” investigating an Epstein customer list if chosen. But recently it has minimized the problem, saying that it does not want the support of those who push Epstein’s “bulls.
The Department of Justice said in a memorandum this month that a review of the files in the case had not created a list of clients and that “no credible evidence was found that Epstein blackmailed prominent people as part of their actions.”
Many of Trump’s supporters have ignored Trump’s calls to move from the records, which led the president to direct Attorney General Pam Bondi to seek the launch of the archives last week. The Department of Justice has a request to reveal the transcripts of the Grand Jury in the Southern District of New York, where he was accused of Epstein.