🚨 OMG! HEARING TAKES A SHARP TURN! Jamie Raskin delivers a striking remark aimed at Pam Bondi 😳🏛️ But the point raised moments later is what really left the room…

Brian Tyler Cohen was joined by Congressman Jamie Raskin for an extended discussion following Pam Bondi’s high-profile testimony — a hearing that has continued to generate national attention.

One moment in particular went viral.

During questioning, Bondi defended the administration’s handling of the Epstein files by emphasizing that over three million pages of documents had been released. She declared Donald Trump “the most transparent president in the nation’s history” and then pivoted — unexpectedly — to the stock market.

“The Dow is over $50,000 right now,” she said, chastising lawmakers for pressing her about Epstein while markets were soaring.

Raskin, who was visibly laughing during the exchange, explained why.

He said he had warned Bondi beforehand not to waste members’ limited five-minute questioning windows with deflections, personal attacks, or filibustering. Lawmakers, he said, had hours’ worth of questions regarding what he described as corruption and lawlessness within the Department of Justice.

Instead of answering directly, he argued, Bondi repeatedly changed the subject — even citing stock market performance when pressed about alleged privacy violations involving Epstein victims whose identifying information had reportedly been released without proper redactions.

“She’s the attorney general,” Raskin noted. “She’s not the chair of the Federal Reserve.”

He also said Bondi appeared to come prepared with personal insults, at one point allegedly referring to him dismissively. Raskin brushed that aside, framing it as distraction rather than substance.

But the conversation then shifted to a more serious matter: the treatment of Epstein survivors.

During the hearing, Bondi publicly encouraged survivors to come forward with information and contact the Department of Justice.

However, lawmakers asked survivors seated behind her whether the DOJ had reached out to them — or responded when they reached out themselves.

According to Raskin, none had been contacted. All had attempted outreach. And all said they were ignored.

Raskin described that contradiction as central to the controversy.

He then broadened the discussion historically, referencing the original plea deal negotiated by former U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta in Florida. That deal reduced what had reportedly been a sweeping federal indictment into a single state charge, accompanied by what critics have long called an unusually lenient plea agreement.

Raskin argued that this marked the beginning of what he described as a two-tiered justice system involving powerful figures connected to Epstein.

He emphasized that accountability should apply across party lines — Democrats and Republicans alike — and insisted that anyone involved in trafficking or abuse should face prosecution regardless of political affiliation.

When asked about reviewing the Epstein files personally, Raskin said he had spent several hours examining available materials.

He described multiple layers of opacity:

  • Documents that may have been destroyed or disappeared.

  • Millions of files that exist but have not been released.

  • Millions that have been released but heavily redacted.

  • Survivor names allegedly exposed despite instructions to redact identifying information.

  • Meanwhile, names of potential co-conspirators and enablers remain blacked out.

He said he searched for references to Trump within the database and found extensive mentions. One document he referenced involved a memo summarizing a 2019 interview with Trump regarding Epstein’s access to Mar-a-Lago — which he said appeared to contradict Trump’s current public statements about having expelled Epstein from the property.

Raskin stopped short of alleging criminal proof, stating he does not expect direct evidence to remain easily accessible if it ever existed. But he argued that inconsistencies and redactions warrant continued scrutiny.

He also criticized claims from some administration officials suggesting Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell acted alone, calling that theory implausible given the scale of the trafficking network described in court records.

The conversation then turned to historical comparisons with Watergate.

Raskin argued that while Nixon’s attorney general ultimately faced prison for participating in a cover-up, today’s legal environment is different. He cited the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States regarding presidential immunity as significantly altering accountability dynamics compared to the 1970s.

Still, he noted that public opinion and political momentum remain powerful forces, suggesting that institutional pressure could eventually produce consequences.

The interview then shifted to immigration enforcement.

Raskin described an unannounced visit to an ICE detention facility in Baltimore after winning a lawsuit affirming members of Congress’ right to conduct oversight inspections.

What he described was deeply troubling:

  • Dozens of detainees packed into rooms shoulder-to-shoulder.

  • One toilet for approximately 60 men.

  • No showers.

  • Aluminum blankets on the floor.

  • Some detainees held for nearly a week under those conditions.

He said he was not permitted to speak directly with detainees but observed them gesturing toward the lack of sanitation and overcrowding.

The conversation concluded with discussion of DHS funding negotiations and proposed reforms — including removing masks from ICE agents, requiring visible identification, mandating body-worn cameras, and reconsidering qualified immunity protections.

Raskin argued that federal agents must be legally accountable for misconduct, both criminally and civilly, just like local law enforcement.

Throughout the interview, the overarching theme was institutional accountability — whether regarding the Epstein files or immigration enforcement.

Raskin framed the current political climate as a struggle over constitutional norms, separation of powers, and equal justice under law.

And according to him, that struggle is far from over.

Related Posts

🔥 Podcast Revolt Grows: Rogan, Critics Question Trump Team as Epstein Files Expand

Dưới đây là Cách 2 – Viết lại theo phong cách điều tra sắc lạnh, nhịp nhanh, nhấn mạnh sự mâu thuẫn, nghi vấn và tính hệ thống của vấn…

Read more

🔥 “Losing!” Trump BACKS DOWN on ICE & Troops — Melber and Shteyngart Compare Moves to Putin Playbook

Ten years ago, this story would have sounded absurd. Even during Trump’s first term, it would have felt extreme. A sitting president attempting to indict six members of the opposition…

Read more

🚨 “This did not go well for them!” Frey reacts as Minneapolis ICE surge ENDS amid intense local backlash 😳

Dưới đây là Cách 2 – Viết lại theo phong cách sắc nét, nhịp nhanh, nhấn mạnh cao trào và yếu tố cảm xúc – nhưng vẫn giữ cấu trúc…

Read more

⚠️ NARRATIVE SHIFTING? Recent developments are prompting a closer look at earlier statements about the “cartel drone” issue 🗞️🚁 And when the in-depth breakdown is released, everything suddenly…

Everyone is still trying to process Attorney General Pam Bondi’s bizarre performance before the House Judiciary Committee yesterday. But there was one moment in her opening statement that deserves a…

Read more

⚠️ UNEXPECTED TURN ON THE POLITICAL MAP! The landscape in a conservative-leaning state is showing signs of change 😮🗺️ And as the finer details are examined, everything begins to…

Dưới đây là Cách 2 – Viết lại nội dung theo phong cách sắc bén, nhịp nhanh, tăng tính kịch tính và cao trào, nhưng vẫn giữ cấu trúc phân…

Read more

😱 COURTROOM HEATS UP! A legal development involving Pete Hegseth is drawing major attention 🏛️📜 And when the final argument was delivered, the atmosphere suddenly…

Breaking news out of federal court — and it’s not good for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. In a decisive ruling, a federal judge just shut down what critics are calling…

Read more