Bondi says “no evidence,” while DOJ quietly edits the index
When the attorney general insists there’s “no evidence,” it helps if the evidence keeps mysteriously falling out of the folder.
The FBI interviewed a woman four times in 2019 after she claimed Donald Trump sexually assaulted her when she was underage. Now, as Attorney General Pam Bondi howls “no evidence,” independent journalist Roger Sollenberger has found that the record of those interviews has mysteriously vanished from the government’s publicly available Epstein files
Yet last week, Attorney General Pam Bondi insisted that there was “no evidence” that Trump had committed any crime—adding to the growing pile of denials from Trump officials that constitute a sweeping cover-up of the president’s alleged wrongdoing.
Justice Department records indicate that the FBI spoke to this woman not once but at least four separate times, according to independent journalist Roger Sollenberger. Now those records appear to have been removed from public viewing—despite the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which requires all documents relating to the alleged sex trafficker to be made public.
Sollenberger discovered a record of four separate interviews, which took place in the summer of 2019, in a separate database of documents downloaded from the government’s public files on Epstein. That document indicated that the first of the four interviews was conducted on July 24, 2019, and the last conducted on October 16, 2019. That document was given to Ghislaine Maxwell’s lawyers as part of her trial, though the specific allegations predated Maxwell’s involvement with Epstein, Sollenberger wrote.
When the attorney general insists there’s “no evidence,” it helps if the evidence keeps mysteriously falling out of the folder.



There is no evidence except for how the orange pedo protector has lived his whole life.
Does this put Bondi in contempt of Congress? And, are the missing files visible in the Wayback Machine at archive.org?