U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
Coverage of U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in the Nexus archive.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before a U.S. House Oversight Committee panel regarding the release of federal investigation files related to Jeffrey Epstein. Democrats criticized the interview for lacking an oath or public recording and accused Bondi of avoiding questions, while Republicans defended the process. The committee continues investigating government handling of the Epstein case and has scheduled additional interviews.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform regarding the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files. Democrats criticized the interview for lacking an oath or public recording and accused Bondi of evading questions, while Republicans defended the process. The committee continues its probe into government handling of Epstein's case and related sexual abuse survivor issues.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Pam Bondi testified before the U.S. House Oversight Committee about the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files, but Democrats criticized her for evading questions and not being interviewed under oath. The committee is investigating government handling of Epstein's case, which involved allegations of sexual abuse and included figures like President Donald Trump. Bondi denied accusations of evasion and blamed acting Attorney General Todd Blanche for the file release chaos.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before a U.S. House Oversight Committee panel regarding the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files. Democrats criticized the closed-door, non-oath interview, alleging Bondi avoided questions and shifted blame to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, while Republicans defended the process. The committee continues its probe into government handling of Epstein's case.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi testified in a closed-door session before the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform regarding the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files. Democrats criticized the interview's lack of oath or video recording and accused Bondi of evading questions, while Republicans defended the process and highlighted ongoing investigations into Epstein's case.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform regarding the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files. Democrats criticized the closed-door, off-camera interview, alleging Bondi evaded questions and shifted blame to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. The committee, investigating government handling of Epstein's case, has subpoenaed his estate and plans interviews with figures like Lesley Groff, Bill Gates, and Leon Black.
- Bondi testifies before US House panel on Epstein files, but Dems blast her for evasion
Pam Bondi testified before a U.S. House Oversight Committee panel regarding the release of Jeffrey Epstein's federal investigation files. Democrats criticized the closed-door interview for lacking an oath and transparency, accusing Bondi of avoiding questions, while Republicans defended the process. The committee continues investigating government handling of Epstein's case and has subpoenaed his estate.
- Hospice fraud uses stolen identities for fake patients
The California Attorney General charged 21 individuals in a $267 million Medi-Cal hospice fraud ring, which used stolen identities from data breaches to enroll fake patients in shell hospice companies. Scammers billed the state for non-existent care, exploiting Medi-Cal through Covered California, with over $3.5 billion in estimated hospice fraud in Los Angeles County alone.