(So why can’t they just release it all?)DO NOT PAY ATTENTION TO THE MAN BEHIND THE CURTAIN!!! pic.twitter.com/YuqbAfGvIb
— Ron Filipkowski (@RonFilipkowski) December 23, 2025
(Well, unless you’re Trump’s defense counsel.)Bizarre defensive post from DOJ saying if allegations of Trump had any credibility they would’ve been “weaponized” against him.
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) December 23, 2025
But… if they had credibility, then pursuing them, by definition, wouldn’t be weaponization. https://t.co/UDjkVdHEJt
(Oops)In sealed order issued 12/3, Judge Crenshaw found that @DAGToddBlanche's deputy, Aakash Singh, played a “leading role in the govt’s decision to prosecute” Abrego Garcia. Abrego’s attys’ failed to redact that language in a brief, correcting the error shortly thereafter...
— Roger Parloff (@rparloff) December 22, 2025
1/2 pic.twitter.com/265nwjWyXY
Tens of thousands of documents that appeared to be from the Epstein files were briefly posted on the Justice Department’s website Monday before disappearing without explanation.
...
The materials describe 2008 negotiations between the Justice Department and lawyers for Epstein as he attempted to settle claims that he trafficked girls. They include internal 2019 deliberations by the Justice Department and federal prosecutors in New York as they neared criminal charges against Epstein over his trafficking ring.
The records show prosecutors’ attempts to trace Epstein’s vast financial empire and far-flung properties, his ties to prominent financial industry executives and records of investigators’ efforts to track the movements of Epstein and Maxwell. They also catalogue the internal deliberations of Justice Department officials — whose identities are largely redacted — as they dealt with the internal demands and pressures from superiors related to the Epstein probe.
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