Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, refused to answer questions from House lawmakers during a scheduled deposition at a federal prison facility in Texas, invoking her Fifth Amendment rights and declining to provide testimony in a congressional investigation into Epstein’s trafficking network. Behind closed doors, Maxwell’s legal team delivered a message to lawmakers: she would be willing to testify “fully and honestly”, but only if President Donald Trump were to grant her clemency or commute her prison sentence. Her attorney claimed that Maxwell could confirm that neither Trump nor former President Bill Clinton committed criminal wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, framing her testimony as contingent on presidential intervention. WATCH
13 February,2026 07:01 PM ISTIn a stunning legal reversal, former President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have officially agreed to testify before the House Oversight Committee. This "capitulation" comes just hours before a scheduled House vote to hold the couple in criminal contempt of Congress, which carried the threat of substantial fines and even incarceration.
03 February,2026 06:08 PM ISTLate Sunday night, angry chants of “Shame” and “You Lied” echoed outside the New York City Mayor's official residence. The protest erupted after unsealed Epstein Files revealed that the Mayor’s mother, world-renowned filmmaker Mira Nair, was listed in an email regarding a 2009 after-party at Ghislaine Maxwell’s Manhattan townhouse. While the DOJ documents do not allege any criminal activity by Nair, the disclosure has sent shockwaves through the city. The emails, made public under the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed by President Donald Trump in November 2025, place Nair at a social event alongside high-profile figures like Bill Clinton and Jeff Bezos.
02 February,2026 07:46 PM ISTThe long-buried Jeffrey Epstein files have finally burst into public view and Washington is in turmoil. More than 13,000 documents, images, and videos released by the Department of Justice have triggered fierce backlash as survivors, lawmakers, and legal observers demand full transparency. The partial disclosure, riddled with heavy black-outs, has ignited accusations of a continuing cover-up and raised urgent questions about what the DOJ is still hiding. Survivors say the redactions undermine accountability and delay long-overdue justice, while influential members of Congress are calling the release “selective,” “sanitized,” and structurally designed to protect powerful figures. WATCH
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