03/14/2026
Epstein Hearing Erupts After Ted Lieu Plays Audio — Patel REFUSES to Answer!
In the ritualized arena of congressional oversight, the most consequential moments rarely come from lengthy speeches or carefully rehearsed testimony. They emerge when a single piece of evidence forces the entire investigation into focus. During a tense exchange on Capitol Hill, Representative Ted Lieu turned his questioning toward what he described as a troubling gap in the FBI’s handling of the sprawling investigation tied to Jeffrey Epstein. For years, the case had produced a massive archive of material—flight logs, financial records, witness statements, and recordings linked to individuals who moved within Epstein’s orbit. But during the hearing, Lieu introduced a clip referencing comments from journalist Michael Wolff describing conversations with Epstein and what he claimed to have seen inside a safe at Epstein’s Manhattan residence. Lieu then highlighted a detail that immediately shifted the atmosphere in the room: despite Wolff publicly stating that he possessed more than one hundred hours of recorded conversations with Epstein, the FBI had apparently never interviewed him about those tapes. When asked whether the bureau had subpoenaed the recordings or attempted to obtain them, FBI Director Kash Patel responded with the same answer again and again—“I don’t know.” The repetition quickly became the center of the exchange, transforming what began as routine oversight into a broader question about how aggressively the bureau had pursued one of the most controversial investigations in modern American politics.