SAT . BREAKING: Attorney General Bondi Warns of Possible Jail Time Over Withheld Epstein Files

With hours left before a congressionally mandated deadline, Attorney General Pam Bondi is facing an extraordinary warning: release all the Epstein files — or risk prosecution. That’s not activist hyperbole. That’s Rep. Ro Khanna, co-author of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, laying down the law.
“Let me be very clear,” Khanna said in a video message. “Anyone who tampers with these documents, conceals them, or engages in excessive redaction will be prosecuted for obstruction of justice — regardless of whether they’re the attorney general or a political appointee.”
Translation: No one is above the law.
Congress forced this moment after months of stonewalling. Trump was dragged — politically kicking and screaming — into signing the bill only after a rare bipartisan maneuver blew past GOP leadership trying to bury it. The law gave Bondi’s DOJ 30 days to release all unclassified Epstein materials. That deadline expires tonight at 11:59 PM.
And yet? The Justice Department has been hinting at delays, drip-feeding documents, and leaning hard on redactions — even though the law explicitly bans withholding information due to embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity.
That’s where the pressure explodes. Khanna warned that even if prosecutions don’t happen immediately, statutes of limitation won’t protect anyone forever. Future administrations, congressional subpoenas, lawsuits, and oversight hearings are all on the table.
Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee just dropped a fresh batch of Epstein-related materials — including troubling photos, redacted passports, and text messages about recruiting women — creating new headaches for the Trump administration as the deadline looms.
And looming over it all? A damning New York Times investigation detailing Trump’s long, deeply intertwined relationship with Epstein — one that went far beyond casual acquaintance. No charges have been alleged, but the reporting raises deeply uncomfortable questions that the public has waited decades to see answered.
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie echoed the warning: when the law says “all,” it means all.
Tonight, America finds out whether the DOJ honors transparency — or confirms the worst suspicions of a cover-up. Release the files. Protect the victims. Or face accountability.
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