Click on the Manage Content for adding and managing content.
Click on the Rotator Settings and choose what and how it will be displayed.

What’s inside the Epstein files released by the Justice Department

Kraig Pakulski 0 62 Article rating: No rating

By CNN staff, CNN

(CNN) — The Justice Department released thousands of files related to sex offender and accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein after Congress passed a law forcing the Trump administration to do so.

Friday’s release didn’t contain all the files as the DOJ said it will continue releasing more in the coming weeks.

CNN reporters went through the thousands of files, and you can read highlights below:

Editor’s Note: This story contains graphic and disturbing descriptions of sexual violence.

New batch of photos shows FBI’s evidence against Epstein

From CNN’s Marshall Cohen

The Justice Department released a batch of photos — in addition to Friday’s earlier disclosures — showing some of the evidence gathered in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

The new files were posted to the Justice Department website after 7 p.m. ET, approximately four hours after the initial massive tranche of materials was released earlier in the day. They contain about 120 photos, mostly depicting FBI evidence boxes and envelopes.

The materials include dozens of hard drives, old CDs and computers. One image appears to show a dog stuffed inside a box. It’s been previously reported that Epstein kept a taxidermied poodle.

It’s unclear where these pictures came from, but the Justice Department previously said some of the materials in Friday’s release would include information from Epstein-related search warrants. The FBI raided Epstein’s homes in Florida and New York, and his private island in the US Virgin Islands.

Bill Clinton was in hot tub with one of Epstein’s victims, DOJ official says

From CNN’s Marshall Cohen

A Justice Department spokesperson said Friday that the redacted person in one of the new widely circulated photos of former President Bill Clinton in a hot tub is “a victim” of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse.

The spokesperson, Gates McGavick, posted the image to X and wrote, “Beloved Democrat President. The black box is added to protect a victim.”

The Epstein Files Transparency Act required the Justice Department to redact things that could potentially identify victims who were sexually abused. However, it’s not clear that every redaction in every photo was made to protect a confirmed victim. For instance, an older man’s face was redacted in some images.

Clinton has never been charged with any crimes or accused by law enforcement of any wrongdoing related to Epstein. A spokesperson for Clinton said in a statement Friday that the Trump administration was “shielding themselves from what comes next.”

The statement added that the former president did not know about Epstein’s crimes and had cut off the relationship before those crimes came to light.

“There are two types of people here,” the spokesperson, Angel Ureña, said. “The first group knew nothing and cut Epstein off before his crimes came to light. The second group continued relationships with him after. We’re in the first.”

In a letter sent to Congress Friday, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said that the Justice Department’s extensive review of Epstein-related materials “did not … uncover evidence

Why California could be contending with $5 gas next year

Kraig Pakulski 0 67 Article rating: No rating

By Chris Isidore, CNN

(CNN) — California could soon be running short of gasoline, potentially hiking some of the highest gas prices in the country.

Refineries in the state have been closing for years with two more set to shutter soon: a Los Angeles-area refinery at the end of the month and a Bay Area one in April. Together, the two refineries provide about 17% of the state’s supply of gasoline.

California drivers already pay 50% more than the rest of the nation, about $4.32 per gallon. These closures could boost prices by another 50 cents, according to Andy Lipow, president of consulting firm Lipow Oil Associates.

“The loss of the refineries are certainly going to result in California having much shorter gasoline supplies,” Lipow said. “The price of gasoline in California will rise on a sustained level, because it’ll have to attract imported gasoline month in and month out.”

The closures also risk widespread shortages if any of the remaining six refineries in California experience unplanned outages caused by fires or other accidents. Those risks are more pronounced if the outages extend for a prolonged period — like the refinery in Martinez, California, which suffered a fire in February and has yet to return to normal capacity.

“When you have 10 refineries and two are down for planned or unplanned maintenance, it’s no big deal,” said Tom Kloza, a veteran oil analyst now working for Gulf Oil. “But when you have only six, and one of them is down — God forbid you have a fire — you’re in trouble. It’s then a market that can easily go to $5 to $6 a gallon.”

Only Hawaii, which gets most of its gasoline delivered by ship, has a higher average price for gas than California.

California has the highest gas tax in the country at nearly 71 cents, more than twice the national average, according to the American Petroleum Institute. There’s also the state’s carbon tax, which is paid by gasoline retailers and distributors but passed along to drivers at the pump. According to OPIS, which tracks gasoline price data for AAA, the carbon tax can add another 20 to 25 cents to a gallon of gas.

“California is not like the United States. They’re serious about suppressing carbon,” said Kloza.

Kloza expects the national average to fall to $2.75 per gallon, while California’s prices will either remain near its current 2025 average of $4.64 or climb higher.

“Where rest of the country will probably see lower prices in 2026 than 2025, I wouldn’t bet that’ll be the case for California,” he said.

A ‘challenged asset’

Phillips 66, which operates the Los Angeles refinery, said the closure was a business decision given the cost of operating in California. CEO Mark Lasiher called the LA refinery a “challenged asset” at the start of the year.

The company said it will still find ways to supply California to meet demand, including imports.

Valero, which operates the Bay Area refinery, said in a filing that it was closing the refinery in April due to the costs and uncertainty imposed on the company by California state regulations.

California state officials told CNN they’re confident there won’t be any shortages. They cite the shuttered Martinez refinery, which is set to come back online early in 2026 and is a similar size to the Valero refinery that’s closing.

Even with strict regulations on the blend of gasoline that can be sold in the state, California officials said other sources of gas and changes in the market will allow California to get by with fewer refineries.

“As California refining capacity decreases over time, the state will import less crude and more refined oil products, which refiners around the world now produce to meet cleaner burning fuel standards in California and elsewhere,” the California Energy Commission, which oversees gasoline supplies in the state, told

RSS
First42024203420442054207420942104211Last