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The president of the United States, Donald Trumpdescribed this Friday the case of the deceased pedophile Jeffrey Epstein as a “witch hunt” and criticized the fact that the Department of Justice is dedicating its time to this issue.
Trump stated on his Truth Social account that “they are now 1,000,000 more pages about Epstein” and that the Department of Justice is “being forced to devote all its time to this hoax inspired by democrats”in reference to the publication of documents related to the ‘Epstein case’.
“¿When will they say NO MORE and work on electoral fraud?etc.? Democrats are the ones who worked with Epstein, not Republicans. Publish all their names, shame them and help our country again! (…) another witch hunt,” added the president.
This week, the Department of Justice announced that it has received from the FBI and a New York prosecutor’s office nearly one million new documents allegedly related to the case of pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who They are already reviewing to be published.
A law approved by Congress last November forced the Donald Trump Administration to publish on Friday, December 19 all unclassified documentation on the case of Epstein, who committed suicide in prison in 2019.
The Justice Department, however, only released a portion of the files that day, including several photos of the former Democratic president. Bill Clinton (1993-2001) with Epstein, arguing that the amount of information was too high and that he needed time to review all the content, something that generated criticism from the Democratic opposition and the victims.
In a new game published on Monday, Trump’s name appears repeatedlywho would have traveled several times on the financial magnate’s private plane, but there is no evidence that he participated in his sexual crimes.
At first, Trump did not support the publication of the Epstein documents, with whom maintained a friendship until 2004long before he was accused of prostitution of minors, but the president had to rectify and sign the law after verifying the strong support it had in Congress.
