What Pam Bondi didn’t say in her new admission about the Epstein files will leave you speechless

The White House, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Attorney General Pam Bondi is in charge of releasing the Epstein files.

Bondi has yet to complete this task.

And what Pam Bondi didn’t say in this admission about the Epstein files will leave you speechless.

Pam Bondi says the delay in releasing the Epstein files is due to videos containing kids 

Attorney General Pam Bondi was supposed to release the Epstein files back in February.

That turned into an embarrassment when the documents Bondi made public were a decade old and had already been released.

Bondi recently made a statement from the White House that the delay in releasing the Epstein files stemmed from the FBI needing to dig through thousands of videos that contained children.

But it now appears that Bondi’s hand was forced into making that announcement.

Journalist James O’Keefe posted a bombshell report about why he believes Bondi revealed what she now has about the existence of these videos.

“Yesterday, Attorney General of the United States Pam Bondi was at the White House and disclosed what she represented as brand new information in relation to Jeffrey Epstein: the existence of tens of thousands of videos featuring little children,” O’Keefe began.

O’Keefe explained that Bondi wanted to get out in front of a story he worked on where hidden camera footage showed Biden telling a woman she thought was a nanny that the FBI had Epstein videos with footage of children on it in their possession and the need to protect their identities was causing the delay.

“Now, this is the first time an official has publicly acknowledged that videos of Epstein and his victims exist. What you may not know is just nine days prior, the attorney general had a very similar conversation with a total stranger in a restaurant,” O’Keefe added.

The video O’Keefe posted then cut to the clip of Bondi’s confession.

“Do you know when the Epstein files are going to get released?” the woman asked.

“Um, we hope soon. The FBI has been on them,” Bondi answered.

“Okay, any dates?” the woman inquired.

“No, you know what it is, though? There are tens of thousands of videos and it’s all with little kids. So they have to go through every one,” Bondi replied, revealing the existence of the videos containing footage of children.

O’Keefe said he didn’t know if he should publish this story or not.

But O’Keefe said he erred on the side of transparency and the idea that the American people should have access to the same information as Pam Bondi’s brunch dates.

“Now, we hesitated to publish this story but believe, like we did yesterday, that the public has a right to know,” O’Keefe concluded. “And this one raises serious questions. On one hand, why did our country’s highest law enforcement official share this information with first, not with the American people, but with a self-described nanny at brunch? But more importantly, why was this information held back in the first place? Does this show that a government apparatus is still working behind the scenes to protect powerful people involved in the scandal?”

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