The House Oversight Committee called in Darren Indyke, one of Epstein’s lawyers, who denied doing anything wrong.
But what about an Epstein lawyer, who now serves as a federal judge?
The Judicial Accountability Project recently exposed the fact that Epstein’s former lawyer is not only the federal judge who signed off on the warrant for the Mar-a-Lago raid, but that he lied in his public statements about his time working for Jeffrey Epstein.
The release of the Epstein Files exposed a direct exchange between Epstein and Reinhart in which Epstein sent Reinhart an email asking him to find the probation officer of a “federal absconder”.Reinheart did not ask Epstein why he wanted to locate this particular woman.
Despite being well aware of Epstein’s history and legal troubles, Reinhart emailed the sex offender to say that “my inside source is waiting to hear back from knowledgeable people.”
Who was Reinhart’s “inside source”? The terminology implies that Reinhart wasn’t working through the conventional system, but relying on inside favors from people in the Justice Department. If the email is real, it also shows that Reinhart was actually working for Epstein directly and that he did not tell the truth when he claimed to only be representing his employees.
Whom was Epstein trying to locate?
Calling in the federal judge would be the best way to get answers.
As the Judicial Accountability Project has shown, Congress has the authority to do it. It just needs to act.















