Thomas Massey
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I don't care whether it's 3 million files or whether it's 300 files that they still need to get out there.
But the kind of files they haven't released, they are breaking the law by not releasing them.
They, you mean Department of Justice?
Department of Justice, Todd Blanch now.
And he, by the way, could be criminally prosecuted by the next attorney general.
This is the great thing about passing a law instead of issuing a subpoena.
They didn't do this in Watergate.
They didn't do this in Iran-Contra.
They had commissions, they had committees, they had subpoenas, whether it was, you know, Bill Clinton's issue or,
This is the first time, the Epstein-Files Transparency Act, where a member of Congress or members of Congress got a law passed, passed in the House and the Senate, signed by the president to compel the release of documents.
What does that mean?
Why is it different?
Because every subpoena from Congress expires at the end of Congress.
This law never expires.
This law, unless they can get a House and a Senate and a president to repeal it—
Is in effect for infinity.
50 years from now, if there's an attorney general who is like cleaning out a drawer and find some Epstein files, they have 30 days to release them.
It's incumbent on, we didn't name Pam Bondi, we said the attorney general of the United States.
As long as there is an attorney general of the United States, that cabinet position may go away before the Epstein Files Transparency Act goes away.
because it's forever.