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Volumes of the 2012 official edition of the United States Code in a public library in San Jose, California.   Photographed by user Coolcaesar on July 25, 2022.
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Epstein Survivor Urges Bondi to Honor House Subpoena Amid DOJ Pushback on Testimony

Epstein survivor Annie Farmer urged former Attorney General Pam Bondi to honor a House Oversight subpoena after the Justice Department told the committee Bondi need not appear for an April 14 deposition because she was subpoenaed in her official capacity and is no longer AG; the committee says it will contact her personal counsel to seek a rescheduled interview and some members have threatened contempt proceedings. The dispute comes as the Oversight probe schedules voluntary, transcribed interviews with figures including Bill Gates and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, amid criticism that DOJ has withheld and redacted large portions of Epstein‑related files and exposed some survivor identities.

Congressional Investigations Jeffrey Epstein Network Bill Gates Jeffrey Epstein House Investigation Howard Lutnick and Commerce Department

📌 Key Facts

  • The Department of Justice told the House Oversight Committee that former Attorney General Pam Bondi will not appear for her April 14 deposition because she was subpoenaed in her official capacity and no longer holds that office; Assistant AG Patrick Davis wrote that the March subpoena “no longer obligates her” and asked the committee to confirm it is withdrawn.
  • The subpoena is addressed to “Pamela J. Bondi, Attorney General of the United States,” a formulation that has sharpened the dispute over whether Bondi can be compelled as a private citizen; the committee says it has not withdrawn the subpoena and will contact Bondi’s personal counsel to discuss rescheduling her testimony.
  • House Oversight members are pressing to enforce the subpoena: Democrats including Rep. Robert Garcia and Rep. James Walkinshaw have threatened contempt proceedings if Bondi does not testify, and some Republicans (including Reps. Nancy Mace and Ro Khanna in a bipartisan appeal to Chairman Comer) have urged a public reaffirmation that Bondi must appear.
  • Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has declined to state whether Bondi should comply with the subpoena, and DOJ has cited her departure from the attorney general post in declining to produce her for the April 14 session.
  • Lawmakers point to incomplete disclosure of the DOJ’s Epstein files — roughly 3 million pages released of more than 6 million required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act — with DOJ citing survivor privacy and an ongoing federal probe for withholding the remainder, and they say Bondi’s testimony is needed to explain those decisions.
  • Epstein survivor Annie Farmer publicly urged that Bondi be compelled to testify under oath, criticized DOJ for exposing some survivors’ identities while redacting powerful figures, and warned that calls for public survivor hearings (such as those by Melania Trump) risk distracting from the priority of obtaining official accountability.
  • Separately, several witnesses have agreed to voluntary, transcribed House interviews in the probe: Ted Waitt (April 30), Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick (May 6), corrections officer Tova Noel (May 18), Lesley Groff (June 9), and Bill Gates (closed‑door, transcribed interview scheduled June 10); Gates’ office says he welcomes the opportunity and denies witnessing or participating in Epstein’s illegal conduct, and he appears extensively in the DOJ files.
  • Observers and legal experts frame DOJ’s refusal and Bondi’s nonappearance as part of a broader pattern of Trump‑era resistance to congressional oversight; Chairman Comer says he will consult GOP members and DOJ on next steps as the committee considers enforcement options.

📊 Relevant Data

Native American women represent approximately 40% of individuals involved in street-level prostitution in Minneapolis, despite Native Americans comprising about 1.1% of the Minnesota population and 1.3% of the U.S. population overall.

Native American Human Trafficking: Data Reports 2026 — WiFi Talents

LGBTQ+ youth comprise 20% to 40% of homeless youth in the U.S., a factor that significantly increases their vulnerability to human trafficking.

LGBTQIA+ young people at greater risk for human trafficking — Ohio Domestic Violence Network

Approximately 96% of Hispanic sex trafficking victims in the U.S. are women and girls from Mexico or Latin America, with 70% of traffickers being of Latin American descent.

96% of hispanic sex trafficking victims are — Congress.gov

Poverty and homelessness are key risk factors for human trafficking, with one in five runaway and unhoused youth becoming victims.

Who Is the Most Vulnerable to Human Trafficking? — COPS Office

📰 Source Timeline (11)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 10, 2026
6:07 PM
Distraction? Epstein survivor presses for Bondi testimony after Melania Trump remarks
MS NOW by Allison Detzel
New information:
  • Epstein survivor Annie Farmer says Melania Trump’s call for public survivor hearings risks distracting from ‘the most pressing issues,’ including compelling former AG Pam Bondi to testify under oath about the Epstein document release.
  • Farmer argues that the first lady’s remarks shift responsibility from the government to survivors, saying many survivors have already ‘named names’ to authorities and now want the government to do its job.
  • Farmer specifically faults DOJ for exposing some survivors’ identities in the released materials while redacting names of powerful figures, calling the episode a set of ‘countless failures’ under Bondi’s watch.
  • Farmer voices distrust of federal motives and says survivors are frustrated by ‘one more delay’ in getting answers due to DOJ’s position that Bondi need not appear before the House Oversight Committee.
April 09, 2026
7:27 PM
Oversight Democrat slams Trump DOJ for blocking Bondi deposition on Epstein: ‘Total B.S.’
MS NOW by Allison Detzel
New information:
  • Rep. James Walkinshaw, D‑Va., publicly labeled DOJ’s position that Bondi need not comply with the April 14 subpoena as 'total B.S.' and said her firing does not absolve her of the legal duty to appear.
  • Walkinshaw said Democrats are prepared to use contempt and other 'tools' similar to those Republicans once attempted against the Clintons, and predicted it is 'very plausible' some Republicans would join a contempt vote if Bondi refuses to testify.
  • He emphasized that Bondi’s testimony is a top priority for Democrats on the committee, calling it key to accountability for Epstein’s victims, even as other high‑profile interviews (including Bill Gates and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick) are scheduled.
April 08, 2026
10:20 PM
Bondi won't appear for House deposition next week in the Epstein investigation
PBS News by Stephen Groves, Associated Press
New information:
  • House Oversight Committee spokeswoman Jessica Collins says DOJ has indicated Pam Bondi will not appear for the April 14 deposition because she was subpoenaed in her capacity as attorney general and no longer holds that office.
  • The committee will now contact Bondi’s personal counsel to discuss rescheduling an interview.
  • Rep. Nancy Mace publicly argues the subpoena was issued "by name, not by title" and says Bondi "cannot escape accountability" by leaving office.
  • Ranking Democrat Rep. Robert Garcia says he will push to enforce the subpoena and threatens to seek contempt of Congress charges if Bondi does not testify.
  • The article notes the DOJ website still listed Bondi as attorney general on Wednesday, despite her ouster and Todd Blanche performing the AG’s duties.
10:15 PM
Bill Gates will testify in the Epstein probe; Pam Bondi testimony postponed
NPR by Ava Berger
New information:
  • Bill Gates is scheduled for a closed‑door, transcribed interview before the House Oversight Committee on June 10, according to a source familiar with the matter.
  • Gates’ spokesperson says he “welcomes the opportunity” to appear and reiterates that he never witnessed or participated in Epstein’s illegal conduct.
  • The article details that Gates appears “thousands of times” in the DOJ Epstein files and notes specific allegations in Epstein’s emails involving Melinda French Gates and an STI medication story.
  • DOJ Assistant Attorney General Patrick Davis formally told Chair James Comer that, because Pam Bondi no longer serves as attorney general, the March subpoena “no longer obligates her” to appear on April 14.
  • Ranking Democrat Rep. Robert Garcia states that Bondi “must come in to testify immediately” and threatens that if she defies the subpoena, Democrats will pursue contempt charges in Congress.
  • House Oversight says it will now contact Bondi’s personal counsel to discuss rescheduling her deposition, signaling a shift from compelling testimony in an official capacity to private‑citizen status.
6:35 PM
Ousted AG Bondi declines Epstein deposition, but lawmakers say subpoena still holds
Fox News
New information:
  • House Oversight Committee spokeswoman tells Fox that DOJ has said Pam Bondi 'will not appear' on April 14 because she is no longer attorney general and was subpoenaed in that capacity, but the committee has not withdrawn the subpoena and will contact her personal counsel to discuss 'next steps' for scheduling.
  • Oversight Ranking Member Robert Garcia explicitly states he will move to hold Bondi in contempt of Congress if she does not comply, calling the subpoena 'bipartisan' and asserting it applies to her whether or not she remains attorney general.
  • Rep. Nancy Mace and Rep. Ro Khanna send a new bipartisan letter to Chair James Comer asking him to 'publicly reaffirm' Bondi’s legal obligation to testify, arguing that removal from office 'doesn’t erase her obligation' and that the subpoena was to Bondi 'by name, not by title.'
  • Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche publicly declines to say whether Bondi should comply, stating he will leave the issue to Chairman Comer and others and that he does not have an answer on the subpoena’s status.
5:23 PM
Bondi Won’t Appear on Capitol Hill for Scheduled Epstein Deposition
Nytimes by Michael Gold
New information:
  • Pam Bondi has formally informed the House that she will not appear for the scheduled April 14 deposition in the Epstein investigation.
  • The New York Times details internal House GOP deliberations over how aggressively to respond, including divisions about contempt or other enforcement steps (as reported in the article).
  • Additional context on how Bondi’s refusal and DOJ’s position fit into a broader pattern of Trump‑era resistance to legislative oversight, as described by legal experts quoted in the piece.
5:05 PM
Pam Bondi defies House subpoena over Epstein files
Axios by Kate Santaliz
New information:
  • Axios headline and framing explicitly characterize Pam Bondi’s decision as defiance of the House subpoena tied to Epstein files, reinforcing that she will not comply with the April 14 appearance.
  • The article’s emphasis ties Bondi’s non‑appearance squarely to the committee’s demand for testimony specifically focused on Epstein files, sharpening the subject matter at issue.
  • Social and political reaction around Bondi’s refusal is highlighted, with critics casting it as part of a broader pattern of Trump‑era stonewalling of congressional oversight in the Epstein investigation.
3:56 PM
Bondi won’t appear for April 14 deposition before House Oversight Committee, DOJ says
MS NOW by Syedah Asghar
New information:
  • DOJ Assistant Attorney General Patrick Davis sent a letter to Chairman James Comer stating that Pam Bondi will not appear for her April 14 House Oversight deposition because she was subpoenaed in her official capacity as attorney general and no longer holds that office.
  • The DOJ letter asks the committee to confirm that Bondi’s subpoena is withdrawn, arguing the subpoena no longer obligates her to appear on the scheduled date.
  • Oversight ranking member Robert Garcia has publicly threatened to pursue contempt of Congress charges against Bondi if she defies the subpoena.
  • Reps. Nancy Mace and Ro Khanna jointly wrote Comer urging him to publicly reaffirm that Bondi must appear on April 14 or threaten 'appropriate enforcement' if she does not.
  • MS NOW obtained and described the subpoena, which is addressed to “Pamela J. Bondi, Attorney General of the United States,” sharpening the dispute over whether it is personal or official in nature.
3:01 PM
Bondi won't appear for April 14 deposition in House panel's Epstein probe
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • The Department of Justice has informed the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that former Attorney General Pam Bondi will not appear for her April 14 subpoenaed deposition because she is no longer attorney general and was subpoenaed in that official capacity.
  • An Oversight Committee spokeswoman says the panel will now contact Bondi’s personal counsel to discuss rescheduling her deposition, signaling the committee may pursue her testimony in a different posture.
  • The article reiterates that DOJ released about 3 million pages of Epstein-related files out of more than 6 million pages required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, with top officials citing survivor privacy and an ongoing federal investigation as reasons for withholding the rest, context that underscores why lawmakers want Bondi under oath.
  • Bondi was ousted as attorney general last week; although she initially indicated she would stay for a one-month transition to help Deputy AG Todd Blanche, Blanche has already taken over as acting attorney general, and DOJ now cites her departure in declining to produce her for the April 14 session.
April 07, 2026
7:37 PM
Bill Gates and Howard Lutnick scheduled to testify before House on Epstein
MS NOW by Mychael Schnell
New information:
  • Confirms that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is scheduled for a voluntary, transcribed House Oversight interview on May 6, 2026 as part of the Epstein investigation.
  • Details four additional voluntary transcribed interviews: Ted Waitt on April 30; corrections officer Tova Noel on May 18; Lesley Groff on June 9; Bill Gates on June 10.
  • Clarifies that all five witnesses are appearing voluntarily after March 3 request letters and that the committee granted anonymity to sources discussing the schedule.
  • Adds context and uncertainty around the April 14 subpoenaed deposition of former Attorney General Pam Bondi following her firing by President Trump, including a committee statement that Chairman Comer will consult GOP members and DOJ on "next steps."
  • Expands context on the wider probe by noting prior depositions of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, and Les Wexner, and growing interest in Lutnick’s testimony after he admitted to a 2012 lunch with Epstein on his island despite earlier claims he cut ties in 2005.