Epstein survivors vow to compile own client list after Bondi wavers
She notably orchestrated a botched stunt with influencers to release largely public information via those figures, which led to now-notorious images of the group receiving binders of documents.
A group of survivors of Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking ring have vowed to compile their own list of his clients after the Department of Justice insisted no such master document existed.
“Please come forward, and we’ll compile our own list and seek justice on our own," accuser Lisa Phillips told NBC News. “A lot of us survivors know we’ve been compiling lists of our own, and we have so many other survivors."
The plea comes in the wake of the Department of Justice asserting in a memo that Epstein did not maintain a client list. Attorney General Pam Bondi has faced the brunt of the scrutiny over the administration's handling of the case.
She notably orchestrated a botched stunt with influencers to release largely public information via those figures, which led to now-notorious images of the group receiving binders of documents.
Bondi also claimed, prior to that incident, that the client list was on her desk, though the White House has insisted she was referring to the volume of documents related to the case.
Ben Whedon is the Chief Political Correspondent at Just the News. Follow him on X.