Pam Bondi Will Not Appear for April 14 House Deposition in Epstein Probe
In Brief
Bondi's absence highlights ongoing disputes over accountability and legal obligations in congressional investigations of the Epstein case.
Key Facts
- Former Attorney General Pam Bondi will not appear before the House Oversight Committee on April 14 regarding Jeffrey Epstein.
- The Department of Justice informed the Oversight Committee that its subpoena for Bondi is no longer binding.
- The Oversight Committee stated Bondi will not comply with the congressional subpoena for her deposition.
- The DOJ and Bondi have faced criticism for their handling of files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
- Bondi was subpoenaed as attorney general but is no longer in that role, according to the DOJ.
What Happened
Pam Bondi, former attorney general, will not testify before the House Oversight Committee on April 14 as part of its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. The DOJ stated the subpoena no longer applies since Bondi is no longer in office.
Why It Matters
The situation raises questions about the enforceability of congressional subpoenas for former officials and the transparency of investigations into high-profile cases like Epstein's. Some sources report lawmakers claim the subpoena still holds, while the DOJ says it does not.
What's Next
The House Oversight Committee may seek to reschedule Bondi's testimony or pursue further legal steps. Lawmakers continue to debate the subpoena's validity.
Sources
- CBS News — Bondi won't appear for April 14 deposition in House panel's Epstein probe(4h ago)
- CNBC — Epstein files: Ex-AG Pam Bondi’s April 14 testimony before House Oversight to be rescheduled(3h ago)
- ABC News — DOJ says Oversight's subpoena 'no longer obligates' Bondi testimony in Epstein matter(3h ago)
