Something big is brewing behind bars.
In a stunning turn, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche is set to meet privately with Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted accomplice of Jeffrey Epstein, in what sources say was supposed to be a secret meeting—until it leaked.
This move comes after relentless pressure on President Trump’s Justice Department to finally dig deeper into the Epstein files and get answers the American people have waited years for.
Attorney General Pam Bondi confirmed the meeting and said no one is above the law—and Maxwell will be asked directly: What do you know?
Blanche made it clear: “If Ghislaine Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and DOJ will hear what she has to say.”
This is the first time any administration has formally sought testimony from Maxwell regarding Epstein’s alleged network of high-profile abusers. The announcement follows backlash over a July 6th DOJ memo that frustrated Trump’s base by claiming there was no new evidence and no client list.
Sources close to Maxwell say she’s eager to speak—even before Congress—insisting she’s never been asked to share what she knows.
So why now?
Trump is said to have personally pushed for action, directing Bondi to request the unsealing of grand jury testimony last week. And now, with Blanche preparing to sit down face-to-face with Epstein’s former partner, it looks like the lid could finally come off the decades-long cover-up.
The public wants names. And this could be the first real step toward getting them.






