House panel grills FBI’s Kash Patel over Epstein investigation files
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FBI director Kash Patel testifying before the House Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, on Sept 17.
PHOTO: TIERNEY L. CROSS/NYTIMES
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- FBI director Kash Patel defended his handling of Epstein files amid claims of shielding information. He cited court orders and limited FBI material as reasons for restricted releases.
- Republican Thomas Massie questioned if the FBI investigated individuals named by Epstein's victims in FBI files. Patel stated the FBI would investigate "credible information".
- Patel said the FBI lacks credible evidence Epstein trafficked women to others. Democrats accused him of shielding Trump, while Patel denied any cover-up.
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WASHINGTON - FBI director Kash Patel on Sept 17 faced a second day of questioning by US lawmakers, defending his handling of investigative files on Jeffrey Epstein against claims from Democratic and one Republican lawmaker that the FBI is shielding information related to the late financier and sex offender.
Appearing before a US House of Representatives panel, Mr Patel offered a variety of explanations for the Trump administration’s about-face on releasing material on the Epstein investigations.
He argued that court orders prevented the release of some evidence, and that in other areas the FBI had limited material in its possession.
“We are releasing as much as legally allowed,” Mr Patel told the House Judiciary Committee.
The Justice Department enraged many prominent supporters
Many in Mr Trump’s political base believed his administration would implicate other wealthy and powerful people in Epstein’s alleged sex trafficking of underage girls.
Republican Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky, a critic of the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein probe and co-author of legislation to require more disclosures about it, said he had been told by alleged victims of Epstein that they had given the FBI information about others who had been involved in Epstein’s abuse.
“We know these people exist in the FBI files, files that you control. I don’t know exactly who they are, but the FBI does. Have you launched any investigations into any of these people?” Mr Massie asked.
Mr Patel said the FBI would investigate “credible information” but that he has not received any such information.
Mr Patel told a Senate panel on Sept 16 that the FBI does not have credible evidence that Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, trafficked women and underage girls to anyone other than himself.
The issue has sparked a rare rift between Mr Trump and his Make America Great Again movement. Mr Trump, a one-time friend of Epstein, has urged his supporters to move on and dismissed the issue as a hoax pushed by his Democratic opponents.
Three federal judges have rejected Justice Department requests to unseal material from grand juries that investigated Epstein and his former partner Ghislaine Maxwell.
Judges found, and prosecutors acknowledged, that the material contained little information that was not already public.
Mr Patel also suggested that other material, including reports of witness interviews, was protected from disclosure by court orders. He told lawmakers the FBI does not have videos that implicate others in Epstein’s alleged crimes.
Mr Patel had boosted claims about Epstein during appearances on conservative podcasts before Mr Trump nominated him to lead the FBI.
Democrats accused Mr Patel of seeking to shield information about Mr Trump, who has not been accused of misconduct related to Epstein.
“How did you go from being a crusader for accountability and transparency to being a part of the conspiracy and cover up?” asked Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.
The Justice Department has begun handing records to the House Oversight Committee, which has subpoenaed material related to Epstein. REUTERS

