A Newsmax guest said on Wednesday night that Jeffrey Epstein “got a very soft touch” from authorities in Florida who “did not prosecute Epstein correctly,” referring to the sweetheart federal nonprosecution agreement Epstein received in 2008 after he was first accused of sexually abusing dozens of underage girls. The prosecutor who oversaw that plea deal — and later served in President Donald Trump's cabinet during his first administration — joined Newsmax’s board of directors earlier this year.
The Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation stated in an unsigned memo released Sunday that an extensive review of the Epstein case “revealed no incriminating ‘client list,’” that there was no “credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions,” and that investigators “concluded that Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide in his cell.” The memo repudiated several narratives heavily promoted by right-wing media and triggered a furious response from MAGA figures who accused the agencies of engaging in a cover-up.
Newsmax, a Trumpist competitor to Fox News, has participated in that backlash, and during a Wednesday night segment, host Rob Finnerty asked former Fox host Bill O’Reilly whether he believed that “really powerful people” had gotten “to somebody at DOJ or the FBI or maybe the president himself and made this story go away.”
“I don't waste my time on stuff like that, Rob, because I don't have any information indicating that,” O’Reilly replied. “I do know that in Florida, the authorities did not prosecute Epstein correctly. And there, that's a fact.”
“Now, there hasn't been any charges of bribery or anything like that,” O’Reilly continued. “But Epstein got a very soft touch in Florida when this whole first thing broke. And so that is a fact.”