Bill Clinton just flipped the script on Trump over the DOJ's failure to release all the Epstein files
As the DOJ drips out Epstein material and shields key details, Clinton’s team dares the administration to stop hinting and start being transparent.
Bill Clinton’s team is done playing defense, and they’re calling the Justice Department’s bluff.
On Monday, a spokesperson for the former president issued a rare and pointed demand: if the Department of Justice has documents related to Clinton in its ongoing Jeffrey Epstein file release, it should stop hinting and start publishing. The message was unmistakable — either put everything on the table, or admit that the current drip-feed is designed to protect someone else.
The statement, delivered by Clinton spokesperson Angel Ureña, lands amid a weeks-long spectacle in which the Trump administration has tried to reframe Clinton as the GOP’s preferred villain in the Epstein saga, even as the White House itself absorbs mounting criticism over how the files have been handled.
“What the Department of Justice has released so far, and the manner in which it did so, makes one thing clear: someone or something is being protected,” Ureña said. “We do not know whom, what or why. But we do know this: We need no such protection.”
The full statement from Clinton’s spokesperson.
The DOJ released the first batch of Epstein-related records on Friday but conspicuously failed to publish the full trove required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which was signed into law last month by President Trump. The statute mandates the release of all federal documents related to Epstein investigations, with limited redactions allowed, chiefly to protect victims.
Instead, the department produced a partial release riddled with redactions and omissions.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has insisted the DOJ is merely proceeding out of caution. He said last week the department is reviewing material to protect victims’ identities and will release “potentially hundreds of thousands” of additional files in the coming weeks. Blanche also made a point of denying the obvious suspicion.
“There’s no effort to hold anything back because there’s the name Donald J. Trump or anybody else’s name,” he said.
That assurance has done little to calm critics, especially after the DOJ released multiple photographs of Clinton alongside Epstein’s convicted co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell, while simultaneously redacting faces of other individuals in the same images. The law permits redactions tied to active investigations and material that “contain personally identifiable information of victims,” but it does not authorize selective implication by omission.
Ureña warned that if the DOJ refuses to fully comply, it will confirm what many already suspect: that the administration is “using selective releases to imply wrongdoing about individuals who have already been repeatedly cleared by the very same Department of Justice, over many years, under Presidents and Attorneys General of both parties.”
Clinton’s name has been associated with Epstein since the early 1990s, and the two were photographed together several times. As previously reported, Clinton flew on Epstein’s plane in the 1990s to several international destinations. Clinton has said he was unaware of Epstein’s crimes and has never been accused of wrongdoing in connection with him. His spokesperson has also stated that Clinton’s Secret Service detail accompanied him on those trips.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche is grilled on Meet the Press over the DOJ’s decision to delete some documents from the Epstein files release, including on that featured photos of Trump.
None of that nuance has stopped the administration from leaning into implication by imagery.
Blanche, the second-highest-ranking official at the DOJ, has continued to insist the Trump administration is complying with the law, even as bipartisan lawmakers accuse it of “flouting” the statute’s requirements. The problem, critics note, is that the law contains no clear enforcement mechanism if the DOJ simply ignores the 30-day deadline.
And then there’s the disappearing evidence.
Blanche defended the DOJ’s decision to temporarily remove several documents from the initial release — including one featuring a photograph of Trump — during an appearance Sunday on Meet the Press. Speaking to Kristen Welker on NBC, Blanche said the image was taken down after concerns were raised by victims and would be reinstated following a review.
In other words: trust us, again.
Clinton’s team is signaling it won’t. If the DOJ believes selective disclosure is a political weapon, Ureña’s message makes clear it cuts both ways. Release everything or stop pretending this is about transparency at all.













