WASHINGTON — Former Attorney General Pam Bondi arrived on Capitol Hill Friday for a transcribed interview with House lawmakers about the release of investigative files on the deceased pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Bondi, 60, ignored reporter questions while entering the House Oversight Committee’s hearing room for her grilling, wearing a white bandage on her neck that appeared to be related to a recent thyroid cancer diagnosis.

Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general in charge of the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, will serve as Bondi’s personal attorney for the interview.

“This case hasn’t been thoroughly investigated,” said Oversight Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.), touting his committee’s work obtaining documents from Epstein’s estate as well as the Department of Justice while securing multiple interviews with ex-associates of the sex offender.

“What documents remain? Why haven’t they been turned over?” he asked. “I want every document. I don’t want anything held back.”

“The government has failed the survivors,” continued Comer, mentioning that “some names” had recently been named by former Epstein assistant Sarah Kellen as potentially implicated in the financier’s crimes.

Share.
Exit mobile version