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have breaking developments this evening. The United States Department of Justice has published the missing FBI 302 interviews with an Accuser of the President of the United States. CNN has confirmed that the FBI published these interviews after for a long time concealing them from the public. And the question is why? Now tonight I was able to go through the Epstein files myself. I was able to find the three interviews conducted between the FBI and the woman who accused Donald Trump of abusing her when she was a child. I'm going to go through some of these interviews tonight to show you and tell you how I found them. And then I'm also going to talk about some of the other news that you missed today. From Iran to Kristi Noem to More make sure to like comment, share and subscribe. There are a lot of new files that were just uploaded to the Epstein website. I'm digging through them all night. Subscribe to support my work and to keep me caffeinated to my substack. Click the link below. Now before I go into these interviews, I want to tell you how I found them. So in 2020 in 2021, when Ghislaine Maxwell was on trial, Jeffrey Epstein's co conspirator, she received a plethora of evidence from the Justice Department, from the United States Government as part of its required disclosures that the DOJ does when it prosecutes someone, it's required to disclose any inculpatory evidence, any exculpatory evidence, any evidence that could convict Ghislaine Maxwell, any evidence that could have help acquit Ghislaine Maxwell. As part of these discovery disclosures, the Justice Department provided three FBI 302s which are memorializing interviews conducted between an accuser of the Presidents and the FBI. Now until today, these interviews were not on the Justice Department's website. There are three of them. They were conducted at or after the time of Epstein's death. The first interview was conducted on August 22, 2019. As you can see from the date of the entry. The second interview was conducted on August 30, 2019 and then the final interview was conducted on October 22, 2019. A series of three FBI 302s. Now how did I find these? Well, whenever you produce A document to the opposing side in a criminal case, you have your own Bates numbers. So in this case, I was able to cross reference the Bates numbers from a list of documents that had been given to Ghislaine Maxwell's attorneys. That list had been public corresponding with the Bates numbers on these documents, these FBI 302s. I'm going to walk you through what the accusations are against the President of the United States in these files. I want to make something very clear. I'm not saying that these accusations are true. And maybe there's a reason the FBI did not follow up and did not continue this investigation. Maybe they found this person to be not credible, I don't know. But the accusations are there and they were substantial enough to the point where the FBI sat down with this woman on three separate occasions. This first accusation, during the first interview, the woman outlined really the crux of the accusation. I'm not going to read you all of it because it is graphic in nature, but you can see starting in the third line or Trump's name began at the beginning. Trump asked everyone to leave the room. Trump mentioned something to the effect of let me teach you how little girls are supposed to be, proceeded to unzip his pants. As you can see his quotes right afterwards. I'm not going to read them to you because platform specific reasons. And then it goes on to say that this person, this accuser, got the feeling that the relationship between EP and Trump included a certain amount of jealousy. She thought Trump appeared jealous of Epstein at some point. They ended up on level playing fields. Trump and Epstein sometimes used the terms fresh meat, untainted and not jaded while referring to girls. That is what she told the FBI in a follow up later on in this FBI 302, she recalled at least one incident in which Epstein took her off the island when she was 13 to 15 years old. He drew, drove her, flew her to New York, introduced her to someone with money. Money, it was Donald Trump. It also includes allegations that Epstein was blackmailing people. And she says that Trump knew about this blackmail. So that is what the accusations are in these interviews that were just released today. This is another section of a different of one of the later interviews where she essentially says that she wasn't fully comfortable detailing her contacts with Trump because what's the point of providing information when there's a strong possibility that nothing could be done with it? So that's. Those are the three interviews. Those interviews had been previously never reported to the public because they were previously private. The Justice Department withheld them from public view. Tonight. They're public. And I want to stress once again, I'm not saying these interviews are accurate. I'm not saying that the allegations are proven. But what I am saying is that they are there. And there may be a reason why the Justice Department didn't want journalists, didn't want the public to see them. And the claim that these allegations, the reason why they didn't, weren't released is because they are completely unfounded. Well, that to me doesn't hold any water because the Justice Department released a whole host of allegations against the president of the United States outside of these three interviews. There were allegations that were arguably even more horrific and graphic in nature, and yet the Justice Department felt completely comfortable releasing them to the public. So my question is, what took until tonight to get these out to the public? Maybe we'll know, maybe we'll find out. Maybe we'll never find out. I don't know. But I am here to just report the news. I'm here to tell you what's in these interviews, and that's what's in these interviews. Now, in other news tonight, Donald Trump is facing trouble getting Mark Wayne Mullen, his new nominee to be the Department of Homeland Security secretary, confirmed quick enough. Remember, Donald Trump just said that Mark Wayne Mullen is going to take over as DHS secretary. He's just going to be appointed. Well, he actually can't just be appointed. He has to be nominated and he has to be confirmed by the Senate. And right now, it's not fully clear exactly how Trump can simply announce this effective at the end of the month, since he has not Senate confirmed and not eligible to be acting secretary under laws governing cabinet level vacancies. In addition, the New York Times is now reporting that a strike on February 28th at Hidden Elementary School in southern Iranian town of Minab, the deadliest known episode of civilian casualties since the United States and Israel attacked Iran, was likely done by the United States during a precision precision strike that was targeting a base naval base operated by the irgc, the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. This is a photograph of what the base looked like before on May 14 versus what the photograph looked like on March 4 after the strikes. These strikes killed more than 170 people, a majority of them being children. A majority of the strikes killed children. Now, what's unclear is whether the strikes were intentional by the United States military or whether they were a misfire or accidental in some way. If intentional, that would be a serious war crime, a violation of international laws. There's a lot more news for you to take a look at. Go look at my substack link below. Subscribe to support my work as always. Like comment, share and subscribe and I'll have another update for you soon. Hey folks, thanks so much for watching. Feel free to add this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or anywhere you watch for the latest breaking news and and daily hits throughout the day. Make sure to follow subscribe. See you soon for more.
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Episode: Breaking: Trump Panics as Justice Department Releases Bombshell Accusations Against Him
Host: Aaron Parnas
Date: March 6, 2026
This episode dives into newly released FBI 302 interviews connected to Donald Trump, previously withheld by the Department of Justice (DOJ), and now made public. Host Aaron Parnas meticulously breaks down the key findings from these interviews—which include grave allegations by an accuser—and discusses their context, credibility issues, and broader legal implications. Aaron also touches on significant political and international developments, ensuring listeners are up to speed on the day’s biggest breaking news.
Breaking News (00:19):
Background & Discovery Process:
Clarifying the Accusations (01:50–04:02):
Host’s Cautions:
“I want to make something very clear. I’m not saying these accusations are true… But the accusations are there and they were substantial enough to the point where the FBI sat down with this woman on three separate occasions.” (03:10)
Aaron questions why these specific interviews remained private when other, equally graphic or more severe allegations had been previously released:
“There may be a reason why the Justice Department didn’t want journalists, didn’t want the public to see them… The claim that these allegations…were completely unfounded…I think that doesn’t hold any water.” (06:00)
Speculates that either credibility concerns or institutional discretion delayed the publication.
“If intentional, that would be a serious war crime, a violation of international laws.” (07:50)
On the gravity of the release:
"Tonight, they're public. And I want to stress once again, I’m not saying these interviews are accurate. I’m not saying that the allegations are proven. But what I am saying is that they are there." (05:05)
On DOJ transparency:
"So my question is, what took until tonight to get these out to the public? Maybe we’ll know, maybe we’ll find out. Maybe we’ll never find out. I don’t know. But I am here to just report the news." (06:25)
On government process:
"He actually can’t just be appointed. He has to be nominated and he has to be confirmed by the Senate." (06:55)
Aaron Parnas delivers, in his signature rapid-fire yet measured style, an episode loaded with urgent developments: a substantial new public record involving past presidents and high-level criminal allegations, the intricacies of political appointments, and updates about U.S. military activity abroad. Listeners are left with open questions about government transparency and the ongoing, evolving saga of legal and ethical accountability for those at the top.
“I am here to just report the news. I’m here to tell you what’s in these interviews, and that’s what’s in these interviews.” (06:29)
For more breaking insights, Aaron directs listeners to his Substack and encourages ongoing engagement.