Donald Trump says he's "allowed" to pardon Ghislaine Maxwell
UNITED STATES, JUL 25 – President Trump acknowledged his constitutional power to pardon Ghislaine Maxwell but said he has not given the decision any thought amid ongoing Justice Department meetings.
- On Friday, President Donald Trump deflected questions about pardoning Maxwell, noting her ongoing interviews with a top DOJ official in Florida prison.
- Amid growing transparency demands, public pressure mounted for more Epstein files and Maxwell’s interviews, with the DOJ publishing a memo ruling out a client list, prompting calls for deeper investigations.
- On Thursday and Friday, Maxwell sat for interviews with Todd Blanche, in what her attorney called a “very productive” session with her answering “every single question.”
- Trump urged Americans to focus on Barack Hussein Obama’s alleged coup or Bill Clinton and Larry Summers’s ties, while insisting, “I have nothing to do with the guy.”
- The House Committee on Oversight has issued a subpoena for Maxwell to testify in August, and she is scheduled to testify from prison after the subpoena.
117 Articles
117 Articles
Trump is fighting Epstein scandal. Ghislaine Maxwell will testify before Congress Committee. Their knowledge could change everything.
The U.S. President will not get rid of the Epstein affair. The Department of Justice questioned the life partner of the dead sex offender. Donald Trump insists that this is a fraud.
Maxwell was sentenced to twenty years in prison as an accomplice to the pedophile sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Donald Trump's government is now looking for a conversation with her.
Trump agrava la ya problemática situación con Ghislaine Maxwell
Análisis de Aaron Blake, CNN Entrevistar a Ghislaine Maxwell es el primer gran movimiento del Gobierno de Trump para intentar calmar las preocupaciones sobre su manejo, ampliamente impopular, de los archivos de Jeffrey Epstein. El vicesecretario de Justicia Todd Blanche concluyó este viernes dos días de entrevistas con la asociada condenada de Epstein. Sin embargo, ya existían muchas razones para ser escépticos respecto a esta medida y a sus pos…
Analysis by Aaron Blake, CNN Interviewing Ghislaine Maxwell is the Trump administration's first major move to try to allay concerns about its widely unpopular handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche concluded two days of interviews with the convicted Epstein associate on Friday. But there were already plenty of reasons to be skeptical about the move and its potential outcomes, given the motivations of both par…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 44% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium