Trump sues Wall Street Journal for $10 billion via Epstein’s birthday letter report
President Trump filed a $10 billion lawsuit against Rupert Murdoch and the Wall Street Journal, alleging that he sent Epstein in a birthday letter that he had stripped Epstein.
WASHINGTON – Sen. Amy Klobuchar has fought back against President Donald Trump after denounced Democrats about his administration’s faces handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
Some prominent Republicans, GOP voters and Democrats have similarly accused the Justice Department of failing to review files about dishonorable investors. Online conspiracy has long spread the scandalous Epstein “client list” and the deaths of sex offenders convicted of suicide in 2019.
However, the Department of Justice and the FBI have released detailed reports against which they discovered that Epstein had no client list or proofs that were murdered.
Still, the Trump administration is under pressure to release all the information the government may have in Epstein.
In response, Trump told the truth social post on July 18 that “If Epstein had a ‘smoking gun’, why didn’t Demus control the ‘file’ for four years and in charge of Garland and Comey?
Trump was referring to former Attorney General Merrick Garland, who served under President Joe Biden, and former commander James Comey, whom Trump fired after Trump’s first presidential campaign investigation in 2017.
But Klobuchar told CNN’s Jake Tupper on “union status” that Trump’s denouncement of the Democrats “had denounced Coldplay like a CEO caught up in camera.”
Astronomer CEO Andy Byron was seen accepting the company’s chief talent officer last week with a Boston-area performance by the band Coldplay. Byron resigned from his role after the video quickly went viral, prompting widespread jokes and speculation.
A Minnesota Democrat said, “It was the Trump administration that they made this promise to release it, so I blame Democrats for this, to me, I’m sorry.
Adding fuel to the fire is a Wall Street Journal report in which Trump sent an obscene letter to Epstein on his 50th birthday. Trump denied the report and then sued the magazine. He also directed Attorney General Pam Bondy to produce more Epstein documents in public cries for the record.
Contributions: Zac Anderson and Aysha Bagchi, USA Today

