House Oversight Chair says Justice Department to start providing Epstein-related records on Friday
House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer said in a statement on Monday that the Justice Department will start turning over records related to Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.
This comes after the committee subpoenaed the Justice Department for the records and set a deadline of Aug. 19.
âOfficials with the Department of Justice have informed us that the Department will begin to provide Epstein-related records to the Oversight Committee this week on Friday,â Comer said.
The announcement by the committee chair came the same day that former Attorney General Bill Barr appeared on Capitol Hill for a deposition by the panel about matters related to Jeffrey Epstein, the first of 10 high-profile Democratic and Republican witnesses subpoenaed by the committee to testify on the case.
Many Republicans have called for more transparency surrounding the case and the release of records related to the matter â and the issue has roiled the House.
Comer told reporters when he arrived that he did not expect the DOJ to meet the deadline because the department is still trying to compile the records. He said he expects to get them âvery soon.â
Barr served in the top job at the Department of Justice during President Donald Trumpâs first term and was in the role when Epstein while awaiting trial on federal charges accusing him of sexually abusing underage girls. Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell at New Yorkâs Metropolitan Correctional Center, a federal detention facility.
Barr did not speak to reporters as he arrived about an hour earlier than when he was scheduled to begin his deposition. Barr later departed the deposition without comment.
During a break in the deposition, Comer told reporters that Barr testified that Epstein died by suicide and there was no foul play. Comer acknowledged that is the âgeneral consensusâ but said, âthere was a blind spot in the cameras. It seemed like there was a lot of stuff that was there to potentially aid in a suicide.â
He also said Barr testified about Trump, saying the former attorney general said he ânever had conversations with President Trump pertaining to a client listâ related to Epstein and that âhe had never seen anything that would implicate President Trump in any of this.â
Related video below: Former AG Bill Barr arrives for a deposition under subpoena from the House Oversight Committee investigating Jeffrey Epstein
âDemocratsâ goal is to try to dig up some type of dirt on President Trump. And what Attorney General Barr testified in there was that he never had conversations with President Trump pertaining to a client list. He didnât know anything about a client list. He said that he had never seen anything that would implicate President Trump in any of this, and that he believed if there had been anything pertaining to President Trump, with respect to the Epstein list, that he felt like the Biden administration would have probably leaked it out.â
Shortly after Epsteinâs death, Barr that he was âappalledâ and âangryâ to learn of the Metropolitan Correctional Centerâs âfailure to adequately secure this prisoner,â and announced that the FBI and the Justice Departmentâs internal watchdog would investigate Epsteinâs death.
In 2023, the Justice Departmentâs Office of the Inspector General of the Bureau of Prisons detailing multiple failures that led to Epsteinâs death but found no evidence to contradict the âabsence of criminalityâ in his death.
On Monday, Democrats argued that Republicans were disingenuous with their probe into the Epstein case.
âThe question is if they are truly invested in doing whatâs right and making sure that thereâs real transparency for the American people,â said Rep. Jasmine Crockett, a Democrat from Texas. âRight now, it doesnât seem like that. It seems like they are going through the motions and they want people to believe that they are digging in.â
Rep. Suhas Subramanyam, a Democrat of Virginia, agreed.
âI think the Democratic side is doing most of the heavy lifting. I donât think weâre learning much from the questioning from the House Republicans. It doesnât seem like this is something where they are truly caring about the victims and about trying to get to the bottom of whatâs happening,â he said.
House Speaker Mike Johnson took steps to delay until September a vote of the full House to publicly release the DOJâs Epstein files. The Louisiana has said he supports transparency in the case but wants to give the administration room to handle the matter.
The Republican-led panel additionally subpoenaed nine other individuals for private depositions between August and mid-October. Those are: former Attorneys General Merrick Garland, Jeff Sessions, Loretta Lynch, Eric Holder and Alberto Gonzales; former FBI Director James Comey; former special counsel and FBI Director Robert Mueller III; former Secretary of State and first lady Hillary Clinton; and former President Bill Clinton.