Attorney General Pam Bondi arrived at Wednesday’s House Judiciary Committee hearing prepared for battle. What she did not disclose—until Democratic Representative Pramila Jayapal forced it into the open—was that she had arrived armed with a dossier: a detailed record of which members of Congress had viewed which unredacted Epstein files, when they viewed them, and precisely what they searched for.
The revelation transformed an already volatile four-hour hearing into a constitutional firestorm. Bondi, defending the Justice Department’s handling of the Epstein document release, had just refused to apologize to survivors seated behind her when Jayapal pivoted to the “burn book”—the Attorney General’s private compilation of lawmakers’ digital footprints.
“You brought a binder with you today of member searches from the unredacted file review room,” Jayapal said. “You have weaponized the review process to intimidate members of Congress who are simply doing their jobs.”

Bondi did not deny it. She had, in fact, come equipped with printouts of which representatives had searched for specific names, which documents they had examined, and how much time they had spent on certain files. The implication here was that the Justice Department was not merely facilitating congressional oversight but surveilling it.
“I’m Not Going to Get in the Gutter”
The exchange captured the toxic tenor of the afternoon. When Jayapal asked Bondi to apologize directly to the Epstein survivors in the room for the department’s catastrophic redaction failures—which exposed nude images and personal information of victims—Bondi refused.
“I’m not going to get in the gutter with this woman,” she said, dismissing the request as “theatrics.”
The survivors, some of whom have spent decades fighting for anonymity, remained seated in silence. None had been offered a private meeting with the Attorney General. All raised their hands when Jayapal asked if the Justice Department had ever reached out to them directly.
“Bigger Than Watergate”: A Republican Confronts Bondi
Perhaps more damaging than Democratic attacks was the intervention of Representative Thomas Massie, the Kentucky Republican who co-authored the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Massie, who has spent months pressing the Justice Department to release unredacted documents, told Bondi he had caught her “red-handed.”
“Within 40 minutes of me catching you red-handed with a document that had 20 names redacted except Epstein and Maxwell, you unredacted it,” Massie said. He demanded to know who was responsible for the “failure” and whether anyone would be held accountable.
“This is bigger than Watergate,” Massie declared. “And it spans multiple administrations.”
Bondi dismissed his questioning as a “political joke.” But the image of a Trump-appointed Attorney General being accused of obstruction by a Trump-aligned Republican—on live television, with Epstein survivors seated behind her—was indelible.
The Prince, the Photo, and the Unanswered Question
California Democrat Ted Lieu introduced another element the Justice Department has refused to address: Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Lieu had the hearing display a photograph from the Epstein files showing the former British prince on all fours, hovering over a female. No context for the image has ever been supplied. Its provenance, date, and location remain unknown. The photo itself does not indicate criminality.
Lieu asked Bondi why the image had not been used to prosecute Mountbatten-Windsor. Bondi’s response was swift and deflective: Why hadn’t Lieu asked former Attorney General Merrick Garland the same question?
“I agree with you,” Lieu said. “Garland dropped the ball.”
The exchange showed a bipartisan frustration: three years, three million released documents, and zero new indictments of Epstein’s wealthy, powerful associates. Bondi offered no explanation for why that remains true under her watch.
The Minneapolis Diversion
For nearly an hour, the hearing was consumed by Epstein. But Bondi also faced questioning over the fatal shooting of two Minneapolis residents by federal immigration agents—an incident that has sparked nationwide demonstrations.
Tennessee Democrat Steve Cohen called the shootings “executions” and demanded a Justice Department investigation. Bondi defended the agents, blaming “elected officials who have declared themselves at war with the federal government.”
Committee Chair Jim Jordan swiftly pivoted the discussion to praise Bondi’s implementation of President Trump’s immigration crackdown. The Minneapolis victims’ names were not spoken again.
What Remains
At the conclusion of the four-hour session, several facts were incontrovertible:
The Justice Department has released approximately half of the six million pages Congress mandated it disclose. Bondi has brought zero new charges against any of Epstein’s co-conspirators. Her department inadvertently exposed the identities and nude images of trafficking survivors—then refused to apologize. And the Attorney General of the United States arrived at a congressional oversight hearing prepared to document which elected officials were searching for which names in the Epstein files.
The “burn book” was not a prop. It was a message. And the message was received.
“The Justice Department is hiding nothing,” Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has repeatedly insisted. But on Wednesday, before a packed hearing room and a watching nation, the question was no longer whether the department was hiding information from Congress. It was whether Congress could conduct oversight without first being placed under surveillance by the very agency it was tasked to oversee.














