Bondi Told Trump His Name Appeared in Epstein Files

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It was not clear what those documents were, or in what context the president’s name was raised.

Maggie HabermanGlenn Thrush

July 23, 2025

Attorney General Pam Bondi informed President Trump in the spring that his name appeared in the Jeffrey Epstein files, according to three people with knowledge of the exchange.

The disclosure came as part of a broader briefing on the re-examination of the case against Mr. Epstein, who died in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, by F.B.I. agents and prosecutors. It was made by Ms. Bondi during a meeting that also included the deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche, and covered a variety of topics. Ms. Bondi frequently meets with Mr. Trump to brief him on various matters, officials said.

Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche, both of whom previously served as lawyers for Mr. Trump, informed the president that his name, as well as those of other high-profile figures, had come up in their re-examination of documents connected to the case that had not previously been made public.

It is not clear how significant the references to Mr. Trump are. But the briefing sheds light on private West Wing discussions at a moment when the president’s team is desperately trying to move on and quell the rebellion among those Trump supporters who feel that he — and some of his senior appointees — led them astray with campaign claims that they would make the files available. Mr. Trump’s top two F.B.I. appointees were among those who were adamant, before taking on their government roles, that there was more to uncover in the files. And earlier this year, Ms. Bondi described the files as significant material to wade through.

Mr. Trump has already appeared in documents related to the investigation that have been made public. He was a friend of Mr. Epstein’s until they had what Mr. Trump has described as a falling-out in the early 2000s. At the White House in February, Ms. Bondi distributed a series of binders about the Epstein files that contained, among many others, the phone numbers of the some of the president’s family members, including his daughter.

“As part of our routine briefing, we made the president aware of the findings,” Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche wrote in a statement in response to questions about the briefing, which took place in May. “Nothing in the files warranted further investigation or prosecution.”

Steven Cheung, the White House communications director, would not address questions about the briefing, but called any suggestion that Mr. Trump was engaged in wrongdoing related to Mr. Epstein “fake news” and said Mr. Trump had ejected Mr. Epstein from his club, Mar-a-Lago, for “being a creep.”

Mr. Trump previously denied that Ms. Bondi had told him that he is in the files. The week of June 7, the White House received an inquiry from ABC News about the May briefing, according to administration officials. A week later, an ABC journalist asked Mr. Trump during a quick gaggle with reporters if Ms. Bondi had told him his name appeared in the files. He replied, “No, no,” and said she had told him about the “credibility” of various things in the files. He went on to claim that they contained material manufactured by Democrats.

Department officials have regularly informed some White House officials about developments in the inquiry. Such communications are permissible under the law, although it is unusual for the attorney general to brief the president on an active investigation or a potential investigation.

The existence of the references to Mr. Trump in the files that the Justice Department and the F.B.I. reviewed caused some anxiety for officials who were faced with telling a president who has been known to berate his advisers over even seemingly minor issues when they relate to politically sensitive topics, according to multiple administration officials.

The conversation between Mr. Trump and Ms. Bondi and Mr. Blanche was reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal.

One person close to Mr. Trump, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, said that White House officials were not concerned about the latest disclosures given that Mr. Trump’s name appeared in the first round of information that Ms. Bondi released.

Mr. Trump said in 2019, during his first presidency, when Mr. Epstein was charged with sex trafficking, that he was “not a fan” of his. Mr. Epstein was found dead in his jail cell that year; some of Mr. Trump’s allies have maintained it was suspicious and possibly foul play, even as officials at the time said he died by suicide.

Yet the two men were indisputably friends for many years, part of overlapping power circles in New York City.

The two apparently became friends in the early 1990s and remained so into the 2000s. In 2002, Mr. Trump told New York magazine that Mr. Epstein was a “terrific guy” and added, “It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

In 2003, according to The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Trump signed a bawdy birthday card as part of a book that Mr. Epstein’s girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, was putting together for Mr. Epstein’s 50th birthday. Mr. Trump has denied composing or drawing the card, and he has sued The Journal and the reporters on the byline for $10 billion. The New York Times has not verified The Journal’s report.

Mr. Trump has said over the last decade that he threw Mr. Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago for behaving inappropriately with a guest’s daughter. It was unclear when that happened, but their rift was said to be in place by the time Mr. Epstein was first arrested in 2006.

Investigations like the ones that targeted Mr. Epstein often explore a wide range of tips, and materials gathered as part of such a case could include mentions of people extraneous to the allegations. One woman who accused Mr. Epstein of assaulting her and later spoke to investigators has said she encountered Mr. Trump in Mr. Epstein’s office one day. (The White House has contested her account.)

In 2021, a federal jury convicted Ms. Maxwell of five counts, including the most serious charge, sexually trafficking a minor. When asked by reporters how he responded to her arrest in 2020, Mr. Trump confused his own allies by saying, “I wish her well.”

The question of why Mr. Trump isn’t releasing the Epstein files has roiled the president’s political base for weeks. Mr. Trump said in the 2024 campaign that he would be inclined to do so, and he installed some who had promoted the idea of a conspiracy surrounding the Epstein crimes in top roles in his administration.

But in early July, after searching the files, the administration abruptly announced that there was no “client list” of those to whom Mr. Epstein had helped supply young women, and that they were moving on from the review.

On July 7, the Justice Department and F.B.I. released a memo declaring an end to the investigation. It said that Mr. Epstein had committed suicide by hanging himself in his cell in 2019.

Their decision to keep the remaining material out of the public domain, citing the privacy of Mr. Epstein’s young victims and witnesses, prompted a furious backlash from Mr. Trump’s supporters on the right that has yet to abate.

The memo fueled further suspicion that something was being hidden, and led to top Justice Department and F.B.I. officials furiously accusing one another of creating the crush of controversy that was engulfing all of them.

Maggie Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President Trump.

Glenn Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and prisons.

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