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House committee posts new Epstein documents

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The GOP-led House Oversight and Government Reform Committee released a new set of materials Tuesday as part of its investigation into the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including a transcript from an interview with former Trump attorney general William Barr.

It’s the latest tranche of documents to be posted publicly by the panel in recent weeks, as members of Congress continue to pummel the Justice Department for not putting out information faster.

Barr, during his closed-door testimony with committee members in August, said, among other things, he understood potential reasons why some of the Epstein documents and materials have not yet been made public.

“[T]he general principle is, if you have enough evidence to charge someone, you put that evidence out through the process, but you don’t just open your files,” Barr told lawmakers, according to the transcript. “So I understand why there is reluctance to do it. And, as I say, the Attorney General has to make a balance.”

The committee also publicly released letters from former attorneys general Alberto Gonzales, who served in the President George W. Bush administration, and Jeff Sessions, who served in the Trump administration before Barr. Both men were handed subpoenas for depositions as part of the panel’s investigation, but both wrote they had no memory of information related to the Epstein case that was relevant to share.

Oversight Committee chair James Comer on Tuesday disclosed his requestthat the Epstein estate turn over unredacted copies of the materials it sent over to lawmakers, including cash ledgers, message logs, calendars and flight logs. Congressional staff have already viewed these unredacted materials but only in a meeting with Epstein’s attorneys in New York City; they do not currently have the files in their position.

A second set of materials from the Epstein estate was also released publicly, including two new pagesfrom the so-called birthday book that was put together as a gift for Epstein’s 50th birthday. One is a page labeled “Contents” that lists some contributors to the book, including former President Bill Clinton and attorney Alan Dershowitz; the other is a letter from Coco Brown or “Degenerate II.”

“(so many girls, so little time)? And you there Jeffrey, always grinning like the mysterious mischievous lad you are,” wrote Brown, who is listed as one of Epstein’s friends. “I remember it all with a smile. Though with a melancholy smile to think that you are at mid-century a mere boy, (Though we vampires are supposed to age slowly) ((if at all)).”

The materials’ release comes as FBI Director Kash Patel defends the administration’s handling of the Epstein case in two hearings on Blue Light News this week. He faced tough questioning from lawmakers of both parties during a Senate hearing on Tuesday, and Patel is scheduled to go before House lawmakers on Wednesday.

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Congress

New Jersey’s most vulnerable GOP incumbent is MIA

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Rep. Tom Kean Jr. represents New Jersey’s most competitive district this November — but nobody, even his GOP colleagues, can say where he’s been for the past month.

A scion of one of the state’s most storied political dynasties, Kean’s team says the two-term congressmember is facing unspecified health issues. The New Jersey Republican hasn’t voted since March 5 and has missed almost 50 roll call votes.

The other two Republicans in the New Jersey delegation, Reps. Chris Smith and Jeff Van Drew, said they have called and texted Kean out of concern for his health. But so far, neither said they have heard from him. Van Drew said it’s been “radio silence.”

Several New York Republicans who have worked with Kean on key issues said similarly. Kean’s absence has largely fallen under the radar and GOP leaders haven’t addressed the issue to the conference, according to several Republicans.

One Republican, Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), said he didn’t even realize Kean had been missing until he tried to find him on the House floor Tuesday.

“I was looking for him,” Bacon said in an interview Wednesday. “I didn’t know it was that long.”

“I know the congressman and his family appreciate all of the well wishes and support,” Kean consultant Harrison Neely told Blue Light News. “Please know that he will be back on a regular full schedule very soon.”

Closer to home, Kean’s allies also expect him to come back soon.

“I don’t even know the truth myself or even enough to disclose any information,” Union County GOP Chair Carlos Santos told Blue Light News. “But I have been texting with him and was told he’ll be fine and make a full recovery in the next couple weeks.”

Kean represents New Jersey’s most competitive House seat — the 7th Congressional District, a large swath across the northern and central part of the state that includes Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster. President Donald Trump narrowly carried it by one point in the 2024 presidential race, but Democratic former Rep. Mikie Sherrill carried the district by nearly two points in the 2025 governor’s race. Kean won the district by around five points in 2024.

Kean enters reelection in what could be his most challenging congressional bid to date. He faces an environment that is increasingly challenging for Republicans and the Trump administration is opening an immigration detention facility in his district while pulling funding for a major infrastructure project for New Jersey commuters — both of which have put him in a precarious position.

But Kean’s backers say his temporary absence will hardly be on voters’ minds come November.

“Everyone understands from their own family experiences that people run into unexpected health issues,” Bill Palatucci, a Republican National Committee member and attorney to the Kean campaign, told Blue Light News. “Voters will be completely sympathetic and it’s so early in the year that it will be long forgotten come the fall.”

There is a competitive Democratic primary to take on Kean, with four prominent candidates.

Democrats in the New Jersey delegation have also noticed his absence and have started to be concerned for the congressmember’s health. Those members have also not heard anything.

“It’s been a long absence,” New Jersey Democrat Rep. Rob Menendez said. “I hope he’s doing all right. But I haven’t heard anything.”

Meredith Lee Hill contributed to this report.

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Vote-a-Rama starts tonight

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The Senate will kick off a marathon amendment voting session Wednesday night as Republicans aim to adopt a budget blueprint for immigration enforcement funding.

The chamber is expected to start the vote-a-rama free-for-all around 8 p.m., according to three people granted anonymity to disclose private scheduling. Senate Republicans need to adopt the budget resolution in order to subsequently pass their bill to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol through the party-line budget reconciliation process.

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Senate eyes AI expansion for congressional business

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The Senate’s top cybersecurity official is aiming to expand the number of AI licenses and approved AI tools available to Senate staff — and it will come with a price tag.

The Senate sergeant at arms, the chief law enforcement official on Capitol Hill whose office also manages IT and logistics, is seeking a $2.8 million boost for the department’s fiscal 2027 budget for AI licenses as appetite grows in Congress for using large language models in day-to-day workflow.

“About 10 percent of Senate users have already used the free, unsupported version of this technology,” Senate Sergeant at Arms Jennifer Hemingway told the Senate Appropriations Legislative Branch subcommittee Wednesday. “Moving those users and other Senate users into Senate-supported versions of these platforms is necessary to protect Senate data.”

In March, the Senate green-lighted the use of Google’s Gemini chat, OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot in Senate offices with licenses that support enhanced data security measures compared with the free versions. Staff in the House have been using Copilot, Gemini and ChatGPT, as well as Anthropic’s Claude, approved platforms under the chamber’s internal AI guidelines.

The cybersecurity team in Hemingway’s office is currently conducting risk assessments on about 40 AI tools, she told lawmakers. The sergeant at arms plans to bring recommendations for AI tools for Senate use to the bipartisan AI Governance Board, and “if the AI products meet our defined criteria,” make more tools available to the Senate.

“The most popular on that list is Claude,” Hemingway noted. The sergeant at arms began assessing the Anthropic product March 3.

When pressed by ranking member Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) about the sergeant at arms’ policy of issuing one license per Senate user, Hemingway explained that the protocol is designed in part to incentivize staff to use data-protected versions approved by the sergeant at arms.

“If there is demand to have more than once license per user, we’d be happy to have conversations” with the Legislative Branch panel that funds the sergeant at arms, Hemingway said, calling it a “resource issue.”

She added that staff whose work focuses on AI and who need access to multiple tools could be accommodated very quickly.

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