
"Down in Washington, the students are back in school, the leaves are changing colors, and Congress is deciding whether to look into why the president's name is reportedly mentioned multiple times in materials related to the investigation of an infamous sexual abuser of teenage girls. In my opinion: Yes, that is a question that the United States legislature should be trying to answer."
"I simply believe that it is in the public's interest to know, for example, what the president was talking about when he wrote a birthday note to the notorious sex criminal that stated, according to the Wall Street Journal, that they shared "certain things in common." (Donald Trump has said this letter is " fake" and is suing the Journal over it.)"
Congress faces questions about why the president's name appears repeatedly in documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein. The public interest includes clarifying the meaning of a birthday note reportedly saying they shared "certain things in common" and resolving President Trump's denial and lawsuit over that letter. Additional inquiries concern Trump's statement that Epstein "stole" Virginia Giuffre from Mar-a-Lago, Giuffre's accusations of molestation and pressure into sex with acquaintances, Epstein's continued Mar-a-Lago membership after a 2006 indictment, and discrepancies involving a Department of Justice "raw" video related to Epstein's death.
Read at Slate Magazine
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