Pam Bondi to testify before House Oversight Committee on Epstein files
Pam Bondi has agreed to appear before the House Oversight Committee regarding the Epstein investigation. Her testimony follows a subpoena and previous delays. (sources: washingtonpost, abcnews, theguardian, cnbc, nbcnews)

The House Oversight Committee confirmed that Pam Bondi will testify in a closed-door session on May 29 as part of its investigation into Epstein. This follows a civil contempt resolution filed by Democrats due to her prior non-appearance.
- Pam Bondi has been subpoenaed to testify regarding the Epstein investigation.
- Her appearance was previously delayed after she was fired by Trump.
- The House Oversight Committee is conducting an investigation into Epstein's activities.
Why it matters
The testimony may provide insights into the Epstein investigation and the involvement of various officials.
↓ Why this is on ModernAction
2 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is Epstein Crime Victims Act.
HR4946 · 119th Congress
Epstein Crime Victims Act
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About this bill
What HR4946 actually does
This story is about Pam Bondi to testify before House Oversight Committee on Epstein files. This bill would expand federal crime-victim notification rights to cover nonprosecution agreements.
If passed, it would:
- Expand federal crime-victim notification rights to cover nonprosecution agreements (not just plea bargains/DPAs • Let victims sue the U.S. government in federal court if the government enters a plea bargain or DPA and fails to.
1 other bill moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about Pam Bondi agrees to testify before Congress on Epstein files, committee says. This bill would expand/clarify the DOJ Inspector General’s ability to access information needed to investigate DOJ personnel and actions.
If passed, it would
- Expand/clarify the DOJ Inspector General’s ability to access information needed to investigate DOJ personnel and • Strengthen Congress’s leverage by improving the quality and completeness of IG oversight findings.
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