
"No, Massie answered. They're flouting the spirit and the letter of the law. It's very troubling, the posture that they've taken, and I won't be satisfied until the survivors are satisfied. Massie continued, You know, I said in the hours leading up to this release that we will know if they are complying if they implicate any of the other criminals that are involved, and the suspects that are involved. The witnesses, the victims themselves, have given to the FBI and they've never been mentioned."
"You said you know of at least 20 men who are accused of sex crimes known to the FBI. How do you know that number and do you know those names? She asked. Massie answered, The survivors' lawyers have told me those numbers and they've described their professions in general. But they've only given me one of the names, and I mentioned that in the congressional hearing, Jes Staley. So, I searched these documents; I did"
"Their criticism comes after the files were required by law to be made public on Friday; thousands of files were released then, but it was not the full scope of the documents. Massie and Khanna co-sponsored the Epstein Transparency Act that was signed into law by President Donald Trump and gave the Justice Department 30 days to produce the files."
Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna criticized Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the Epstein file release. The Epstein Transparency Act required the Justice Department to publish files within 30 days; thousands of records were posted but the release was incomplete. The Justice Department acknowledged the release was not comprehensive and said more documents would follow. Massie said DOJ is flouting both the spirit and the letter of the law and insisted he will not be satisfied until survivors are satisfied. Survivors' lawyers reportedly told Massie of at least 20 accused men and provided one name, Jes Staley.
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