
Attorney General Pam Bondi has moved to a military base in Washington as a result of threats from cartels and people critical of her handling of the Epstein files, according to a new report.
The New York Times detailed that Bondi relocated from an apartment in the city as a result of the threats, which were flagged to her staff by federal law enforcement.
Threats against her picked up after the capture of Venezuela's authoritarian President Nicolas Maduro in early January.
The outlet noted that some officials have used the facilities over the past decades, but this is the first administration to make widespread use of the facilities for officials who have no connection to the military.
Bondi has also been taking heat over the administration's handling of the Epstein files. Several Republicans have also taken aim at Bondi, with five lawmakers voting to subpoena her over the matter last week.
They are Tim Burchett, Lauren Boebert, Michael Cloud, Scott Perry and Nancy Mace, who introduced the motion.
"AG Bondi claims the DOJ has released all of the Epstein files. The record is clear: they have not," Mace said when announcing the vote to summon the official.
"The Epstein case is one of the greatest cover-ups in American history. His global sex trafficking network is larger than what is being revealed. Three million documents have been released, and we still don't have the full truth. Videos are missing. Audio is missing. Logs are missing. There are millions more documents out there. We want to know why the DOJ is more focused on shielding the powerful than delivering justice. The American people deserve answers, victims deserve justice. HOLD. THE. LINE," she added.
CBS News reported last Tuesday that the Department of Justice has been scrambling to remove tens of thousands of documents from the dataset. Links to the files direct to a "page not found error" on the DOJ's website.
Some of those document, the outlet adds, include explicit images of survivor information. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the DOJ has withheld files to protect survivors and ongoing investigations, but lawmakers have criticized many redactions, saying they protect powerful people.
Elsewhere, NPR reported that the DOJ withheld some Epstein files containing allegations that President Donald Trump sexually abused a minor.
The report in question claims that the files include what appear to be more than 50 pages of FBI interviews and notes from conversation with a woman who made the accusation.
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