With days left before a hard federal deadline, a sitting attorney general is being warned she could face impeachment if she fails to release the Epstein files. Lawmakers across party lines are bracing for impact as court orders loom and pressure intensifies to disclose records long considered untouchable.
At the center is Pam Bondi, now facing threats of inherent contempt and impeachment. Ro Khanna’s warning signals that Congress is done with delays and procedural shields. The demand is no longer partisan—it’s existential: release the truth, regardless of who it implicates.
The partial release of 68 images, featuring prominent figures but no proven crimes, has only heightened suspicion about what remains sealed. Lawmakers argue that withholding the rest would irreparably damage public trust and undermine congressional authority.
Bondi’s choice is stark. Fully comply with the law and release the files, or risk becoming the symbol of a cover-up that could define her legacy—and redraw the limits of accountability in American politics.