🔗 Share this article Chief Executive Endorses Legislation to Disclose Additional Epstein Records Following Period of Resistance Donald Trump announced on late Wednesday that he had endorsed the legislation resoundingly passed by American lawmakers that instructs the Department of Justice to make public more files concerning Jeffrey Epstein, the late pedophile. This action follows weeks of pushback from the chief executive and his backers in the House and Senate that divided his Maga base and caused divisions with some of his longtime supporters. Donald Trump had opposed making public the Epstein documents, describing the issue a "fabrication" and criticizing those who sought to release the files available, notwithstanding promising their release on the campaign trail. Nevertheless he altered his position in the last week after it became apparent the legislative chamber would pass the bill. Trump stated: "There are no secrets". The specifics remain uncertain what the justice department will disclose in response to the bill – the measure specifies a host of various records that need to be disclosed, but includes exemptions for specific records. The President Approves Bill to Require Publication of Additional the financier Files The measure mandates the top justice official to make non-classified related files accessible to the public "available for online access", including every inquiry into Epstein, his associate Maxwell, flight logs and movement logs, individuals mentioned or identified in relation to his crimes, entities that were tied to his human trafficking or financial networks, exemption arrangements and additional legal settlements, official correspondence about charging decisions, records of his confinement and demise, and information about potential document destruction. The agency will have one month to submit the records. The legislation includes certain exemptions, encompassing deletions of victims' identifying information or private records, any descriptions of minor exploitation, releases that would compromise ongoing inquiries or prosecutions and descriptions of fatality or exploitation. Further Current Events The former Harvard president will halt lecturing at the prestigious school while it investigates his association with the notorious billionaire Epstein. Florida lawmaker Cherfilus-McCormick was indicted by a federal panel for allegedly diverting more than five million dollars worth of government emergency money from her business into her political election bid. Tom Steyer, who tried but failed the Democratic nomination for president in 2020, will run for the gubernatorial position. The Kingdom has agreed to permit US citizen the detained American to go back to the Sunshine State, multiple months ahead of the anticipated ending of movement limitations. American and Russian diplomats have discreetly created a fresh proposal to stop the fighting in the invaded country that would require Kyiv to surrender territory and significantly restrict the size of its military. A longtime FBI employee has initiated legal action stating that he was terminated for displaying a rainbow symbol at his desk. US officials are internally suggesting that they could delay long-promised semiconductor tariffs in the near future.