Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
Chapter 2: What new information was released about Jeffrey Epstein and President Trump?
The Justice Department released a new batch of files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, which contain hundreds of references to President Trump. In a post on social media, the DOJ said the nearly 30,000 documents contain untrue or sensationalist claims about Trump. NPR's Luke Garrett reports.
In a 2020 email, an unidentified federal prosecutor said flight logs show Trump had flown on Epstein's private jet, quote, many more times than previously reported between 1993 and 1996. Another file shows a 2021 subpoena to Mar-a-Lago for employment records during the investigation into Ghislaine Maxwell. Epstein's co-conspirator and a convicted sex offender.
Other documents include a 2019 letter supposedly sent by Epstein to convicted sex offender Larry Nassar, the U.S. gymnastics team doctor. The letter mentions, quote, our president, though it's unclear whether the DOJ verified whether this was in fact written by Epstein.
These documents continue a piecemeal release by the DOJ, despite Congress requiring them to make all the files public last Friday. Luke Garrett, NPR News, Washington.
The divide inside the conservative movement is getting deeper as Republicans continue to battle over who should speak for the party. Several staffers at the Heritage Foundation resigned this week to join a new think tank founded by former Vice President Mike Pence.
Chairman of Pence's think tank, Mark Short, tells NPR that the group is attracting staff and momentum from conservatives craving a return to tradition.
The reality is that there's a big reason why a lot of staff are coming to be a part of our organization. We can earn steadily. The size of our budget continues to grow exponentially. And I think there's a hungering to have conservatism back. And I think that that's what this is about.
Days earlier, tensions flared on stage at Turning Point USA's annual gathering in Phoenix, revealing even deeper fractures on the right. Scientists have created very primitive artificial human wounds in the lab. The goal is to try to find new ways to prevent miscarriages and treat infertility. But as NPR's Rob Stein reports, the research raises ethical questions.
Researchers in the U.S., China, and the U.K. say they have used human cells from the lining of uteruses to create what they say can be called wombs on a chip and already use them to gain new insights into how human embryos implant in a womb.
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