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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

SPECIAL TEXT & VIDEO: Ranking Member Raskin’s Opening Statement at Hearing Slamming Attorney General Bondi’s Epstein Cover-Up, Betrayal of the Principle of Justice for All


 Ranking Member Raskin’s Opening Statement at Hearing Slamming Attorney General Bondi’s Epstein Cover-Up, Betrayal of the Principle of Justice for All

WATCH: Raskin makes opening statement in Bondi oversight hearing

PBS NewsHour  https://youtu.be/FHz0v8DbbU8?si=egDHejNSlJCDcsFI via @YouTube 

February 11, 2026 

Washington, D.C. (February 11, 2026)—Today, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, delivered opening remarks  at the full committee hearing examining Attorney General Pam Bondi’s failed leadership of the Department of Justice (DOJ), including her grotesque mishandling of the Epstein investigation.

Below are Ranking Member Raskin’s remarks at today’s hearing.

 

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WATCH  Ranking Member Raskin’s opening statement. 

Ranking Member Jamie Raskin
House Judiciary Committee
Hearing on “Oversight of the U.S. Department of Justice”
February 11, 2026

Key Points

  • Representative Jamie Raskin criticized Attorney General Pam Bondi for mishandling the DOJ's oversight, particularly in the Jeffrey Epstein case, failing to meet with victims, and protecting abusers while exposing victims' identities. 
  • Raskin accused Bondi of running a cover-up by withholding critical Epstein files and redacting abusers' names while exposing victims' private information. 
  • He alleged that Bondi turned the DOJ into a political tool for former President Trump, pursuing personal vendettas and appointing unqualified individuals to key positions. 
  • Raskin highlighted instances of corruption and obstruction within the DOJ, including the mishandling of investigations into police violence and politically motivated prosecutions. 
  • The statement called for accountability, transparency, and a return to justice within the DOJ, emphasizing the need to prioritize victims and restore public trust. 


Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and welcome, Attorney General Bondi.

You’ve got the best lawyer’s job in America. Your mission is justice and your clients are the American people. 

But, to promote justice for the people, you must listen to the victims, like the women seated behind you. They’re some of the hundreds of survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s global sex trafficking ring demanding the truth for America and accountability for the abusers who trafficked and raped them. You still haven’t met with these survivors. 

So with their permission, let me introduce to you the survivors and late survivors’ family members who are present today: 

Theresa Helm; Jess Michaels; Lara Blume McGee; Dani Bensky; Liz Stein; Marina Lacerda; Sky and Amanda Roberts, who are the family of the late Virginia Giuffre; Sharlene Lund; Rachel B.; and Lisa Phillips. 

Now, you’re not showing a lot of interest in the victims, Madam Attorney General. 

Whether it’s Epstein’s human trafficking ring or the homicidal governmental violence against citizens in Minneapolis, as Attorney General, you’re siding with the perpetrators and you’re ignoring the victims. That will be your legacy unless you act quickly to change course.

You’re running a massive Epstein cover-up right out of the Justice Department. You’ve been ordered by a subpoena and by Congress to turn over six million documents, photographs and videos in the Epstein files but you’ve turned over only three million. You say you’re not turning over the other 3 million because they’re somehow duplicative. But we know that there are actual memos of victim statements in there. And you also took down the Department of Justice’s prosecution memo from 2019. So it’s clearly not all duplicative. But even if it were, why not release it, just release all the duplicative stuff. 

In the half you did produce, you redacted the names of abusers, enablers, accomplices and coconspirators, apparently to spare them embarrassment and disgrace, which is the exact opposite of what the law ordered you to do.

Even worse, you shockingly failed to redact many of the victims’ names, which is what you were ordered to do by Congress. Some of the victims had come forward publicly, but many had not. Many had kept their torment private, even from family and friends. But you published their names, their identities, their images on thousands of pages for the world to see. So you ignored the law.

And even with over 100,000 employees at your disposal, you acted with some mixture of staggering incompetence, cold indifference, and jaded cruelty towards more than 1,000 victims raped, abused and trafficked. This performance screams cover-up.

Convicted sex trafficker and groomer Ghislaine Maxwell “opened the gates of hell” to Virginia Giuffre and hundreds of other victims, as Virginia recorded in her remarkable book Nobody’s Girl. But when Maxwell was subpoenaed to testify before Congress, you and Todd Blanche quickly moved her from a higher-security prison to a minimum-security camp in Texas where she’s enjoyed five-star treatment, including catered meals, private gym time, and access to a therapy puppy. All because Todd Blanche, who has utterly failed to investigate the monstrous crimes of Epstein and Maxwell’s co-conspirators, spent nine hours with Maxwell to satisfy himself she would have nothing untoward to say about Donald Trump, which is your only real interest in this whole matter. 

But abandoning victims and coddling perpetrators is what you do best. When the FBI opened a criminal investigation into the brutal killing in Minneapolis of Renée Good, a poet and 37-year-old mother of three, by Trump’s masked paramilitary ICE agents, you shut it down. You claim you’re investigating the cold-blooded murder of Alex Pretti, an ICU nurse at the VA, but how can we trust the Administration when the President and Kristi Noem call Pretti a “domestic terrorist” and Stephen Miller called him a “would-be assassin”?  Not only do you refuse to share evidence with the state and local investigators and prosecutors in Minnesota, but you blocked their access to the crime scene and the evidence. 

How are you seeking justice for Marimar Martinez, the Montessori school teacher in Chicago who was shot five times by a Border Patrol agent who bragged about it over text; or the family of Keith Porter Jr., a father of two shot and killed by an off-duty ICE agent in LA; or the family of Silverio Villegas González, shot and killed in Illinois minutes after dropping his children at school? There’s no sign of any movement at the Department of Justice. You even launched a criminal investigation into Renée Good’s grieving widow.

But it’s even worse. You’ve turned the People’s Department of Justice into Trump’s instrument of revenge.

Donald Trump orders up prosecutions like pizza, and you deliver every time. He tells you to go after James Comey, Letitia James, Lisa Cook, and Jerome Powell, the head of the Federal Reserve Board, and Members of the United States Congress including Adam Schiff, Mark Kelly, Elissa Slotkin, Chrissy Houlahan, Jason Crow, Chris Deluzio and Maggie Goodlander to name just a few. And you snap to it. You replace real prosecutors with counterfeit stooges who robotically do the president’s bidding. Nothing in American history comes close to this complete corruption of the justice function and contamination of federal law enforcement.

The good news is many serious lawyers at DOJ, including your very own political appointees—your own people—have refused your lawless orders.

Danielle Sassoon, your original pick for Acting U.S. Attorney in Manhattan, resigned rather than follow your corrupt order to quash an indictment against Mayor Eric Adams as a political favor from Donald Trump. A Federalist Society member who clerked for Justice Antonin Scalia, U.S. Attorney Sassoon refused to participate in this blatantly corrupt scheme. Her top assistant, Hagan Scotten, an Iraq War veteran and two-time Bronze Star recipient who clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts and then-Judge Kavanaugh, promptly resigned too, writing to your office: “I expect you will eventually find someone who is enough of a fool, or enough of a coward, to file your motion. But it was never going to be me.” 

You and the President nominated Erik Siebert, a fifteen-year career prosecutor, to be your U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. But after five months investigating Letitia James and James Comey, Siebert found no evidence to justify criminal charges. So you forced him out and replaced him with Lindsey Halligan, Trump’s personal lawyer from the Mar-a-Lago documents case, who had zero prosecutorial experience and no qualifications. And then you were humiliated when a federal judge found that this corrupt appointment was blatantly unlawful and threw out Halligan’s indictments entirely. And grand juries of American citizens have repeatedly rejected your vendettas and baseless indictments brought by the hacks left at DOJ now, with two different grand juries in Virginia voting down indictments against Letitia James in a single week. Just yesterday, another grand jury shut down your vendetta factory by rejecting an indictment against the six Members of Congress who had reminded servicemembers that they have a duty to refuse illegal orders.

You tried to get a grand jury to indict six Members of Congress who were veterans of our armed forces, on charges of seditious conspiracy, simply for exercising their First Amendment rights. I hope you will heed the wisdom and the constitutional patriotism of those grand jurors and not try it again by doubling down on that humiliation.

As your best lawyers are sacked for having participated in the January 6 case or just flee for the exits now, your new lawyers keep lying in court. In dozens of cases, your lawyers have been excoriated for lying to federal courts. Chief Judge Boasberg, right here in the District of Columbia, suggested your DOJ presented “a fraud on the court.” Other judges found your DOJ’s statements to be “inexplicably misleading,” “patently incredible,” “totally inconsistent,” and “so disingenuous that the Court is left with little confidence that the [government] can be trusted to tell the truth about anything.”

Now, as Ranking Member, I asked the Chairman to add a few extra rounds of questions today because we each have five hours of questions, not five minutes, but we’re stuck with five minutes. That’s clearly insufficient to give voice to America’s victims and survivors and demand answers about the corruption and cover-ups that have overtaken your Department.

We have just one round, so we ask you politely but firmly, Madam Attorney General: please don’t waste one second of our precious time by evading our questions, changing the subject, randomly reciting statistics to eat up time, or engaging in personal attacks against Members of Congress. We saw your performance in the Senate and we aren’t going to accept that. This isn’t a game. In the Senate, you brought a burn book, a binder of smears, to attack Members personally for doing the people’s work of oversight. Please set the burn book aside and answer our questions. And when you hear us reclaim our time, that means it’s time for you to stop speaking. We only have five minutes, so when we reclaim our time, that means you stop. And if you don’t, we will ask the Chair to stop the clock and let you go on his time.

The quality of justice in America depends on the character of our government. Please do your job and bring the Department of Justice back from the brink. The survivors seated behind you, and the American people watching everywhere, deserve a Department of Justice worthy of its name.

I yield back.

Ranking Member Raskin’s Opening Statement at Hearing Slamming Attorney General Bondi’s Epstein Cover-Up, Betrayal of the Principle of Justice for All | U.S. House Judiciary Committee Democrats https://democrats-judiciary.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/ranking-member-raskin-s-opening-statement-at-hearing-slamming-attorney-general-bondi-s-epstein-cover-up-betrayal-of-the-principle-of-justice-for-all 




MORNING NEWS UPDATE: FEBRUARY 11, 2026

 

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: FEBRUARY 11, 2026

U.S. News
  1. Ongoing Nancy Guthrie disappearance case: FBI releases images of an armed, masked individual at the victim's home from nest cam footage; a person of interest was detained and released, with searches continuing in Arizona.
  2. Mass shooting in British Columbia, Canada (with U.S. interest due to proximity and coverage): At least 9-10 killed, including the shooter, in attacks at a school and home in Tumbler Ridge, northeastern B.C.
  3. Immigration enforcement impacts: Reports of federal agents' fatal shootings leading to declining support for policies; potential end to crackdowns in states like Minnesota, plus economic effects from raids in South Texas.
  4. DHS officials testify on Capitol Hill: Grilled over recent fatal shootings involving immigrants and related enforcement actions.
  5. El Paso Airspace Grounded: In a highly unusual move, the FAA has abruptly closed the airspace around El Paso International Airport for 10 days, citing "special security reasons." The closure, which gave pilots only three hours' notice, effectively grounds all commercial and cargo flights in the area until February 20.

  6. New York Cold Snap Deaths: Officials in New York City report that at least 18 people have died due to a severe cold snap over the past weekend, with additional fatalities being confirmed as the week continues.

  7. Nuclear Accusations: The U.S. has officially accused China of conducting secret, low-yield nuclear tests and planning more, sparking concerns about a potential breakdown in global non-proliferation efforts.

Politics
  1. Trump-Netanyahu White House meeting: Discussions focus on Iran nuclear negotiations and broader Middle East issues.
  2. Attorney General Pam Bondi testifies: Facing questions on Jeffrey Epstein files, including new documents mentioning Trump and potential administration handling.
  3. Bipartisan governors' gathering unravels: Trump excludes Democratic governors from White House events, leading the National Governors Association to cancel formal meetings.
  4. Immigration's political power shift: Recent surges may boost House seats in GOP-leaning border states due to population gains.
  5. Rahul Gandhi's criticism in India (international angle affecting U.S. ties): Alleges India-U.S. interim trade deal as a "surrender" harming energy security and farmers.
  6. Bondi Facing Congress: Attorney General Pam Bondi is scheduled to testify before lawmakers today. She is expected to face intense questioning regarding the release (or withholding) of files related to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

  7. Tariff War Escalation: Following recent executive actions, the battle over trade policy has moved to the House floor. Debates are intensifying over the "Durbin-Marshall" credit card bill and broader tariff implementations.

  8. DHS Funding Deadlock: Negotiations over Department of Homeland Security funding remain stalled in Washington, with significant disagreements persisting over border security and immigration enforcement budgets.

World Affairs
  1. Russian drone strike in Ukraine: Kills a father and three small children near Kharkiv; part of a large overnight drone attack (129 launched, many downed).
  2. Macron calls for EU common debt: French president warns Europe risks being outpaced by U.S. and China without unified funding for tech and future investments.
  3. Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics underway: Day 5 events, including U.S. silver in super-G, with ongoing competitions in hockey, figure skating, and more.
  4. Brazil's Lula visits India: With large business delegation focused on trade deals and global governance reforms.
  5. Tragedy in Ukraine: A Russian strike on the city of Bogodukhiv in eastern Ukraine has killed four people, including three young children (two one-year-olds and a two-year-old), according to regional military officials.

  6. Munich Security Conference: Global leaders are arriving in Germany for the 62nd Munich Security Conference. Key discussions are expected to center on the Iran-U.S. nuclear negotiations and China’s role in regional stability.

  7. Tragedy in Canada: Reports indicate at least 10 people, including a suspected shooter, were killed in a school shooting in British Columbia, an event that has shocked the nation and prompted condolences from global leaders.

Education
  1. Higher ed under pressure: EAB report highlights political, social, and market forces squeezing colleges, reducing autonomy and margins amid AI, enrollment shifts, and ROI doubts.
  2. Pentagon cuts ties with Harvard: Shifts focus from "woke" institutions to warrior training.
  3. More colleges offer free tuition: Growing programs to improve access, especially for low-income students.
  4. Bharat Bodhan AI Conclave: India's Ministry of Education hosts event on AI in education ahead of larger summit.
  5. Vaccine Mandate Debates: A new wave of legislation across states like Indiana, New Jersey, and South Carolina is seeking to weaken or remove school vaccine mandates, raising alarms among pediatricians about a potential drop in routine childhood wellness checks.

  6. Department of Education Overhaul: Monitoring continues on the Trump administration's efforts to dismantle or significantly restructure the federal Department of Education, with a focus on shifting more control to individual states.

  7. Student Protest Crackdowns: In Texas, state authorities are implementing stricter measures against student walkouts, specifically targeting those protesting recent ICE enforcement actions.

Economy
  1. January jobs report released: U.S. adds 130,000 jobs (stronger than expected), unemployment falls to 4.3%; health care leads gains despite prior disruptions from trade/immigration policies.
  2. Stock market mixed: Dow hits records, but S&P 500 and Nasdaq dip amid retail sales concerns and tech/AI sector worries.
  3. Immigration raids hit South Texas economy: Labor shortages emerging from enforcement actions.
  4. India-U.S. trade deal controversy: Criticized as one-sided, impacting energy and agriculture sectors.
  5. Sluggish Jobs Report: A highly anticipated federal jobs report released today is expected to show a "slack" labor market. Analysts suggest that while the economy grows, employers are becoming more selective, partly due to increased AI implementation and immigration restrictions.

  6. Household Debt Peaks: Data from the New York Fed reveals that U.S. household debt has climbed to a staggering $18.8 trillion, a 1% increase in the final quarter of last year.

  7. Lufthansa Strike: Major travel disruptions are expected tomorrow as Lufthansa pilots and cabin crew begin a strike over pay and cost-of-living adjustments.

Technology
  1. Meta and YouTube teen addiction trial begins: First jury trial for tech giants over social media's impact on youth mental health (Snapchat/TikTok settled earlier).
  2. OpenAI accused of violating California AI law: Watchdog claims issues with new GPT-5.3-Codex model.
  3. Quantum tech advancements: IBM unveils complex quantum supercomputers; Denmark pursues world's most powerful commercial system; potential everyday impacts discussed.
  4. High-growth tech stocks: Focus on companies in AI, optics, and communications showing strong revenue/earnings potential.
  5. Federal 100 Announced: The 2026 "Federal 100" list was released today, honoring leaders in government and industry who have made significant impacts on the federal IT ecosystem, particularly in AI and cybersecurity.

  6. EU Cyberattack: The European Commission confirmed it was the target of a cyberattack on its mobile infrastructure, resulting in unauthorized access to staff names and contact details.

  7. AI vs. Labor: New economic analysis highlights a growing trend of "capital-for-labor" substitution, where companies are prioritizing investments in AI over traditional hiring, contributing to the current sluggish job market.

Health
  1. Obesity linked to 1 in 4 U.S. infectious disease deaths: Highest among wealthy nations; higher risks from flu, COVID-19, and other infections.
  2. Aging anxiety accelerates physical aging: New study shows worry about getting older has measurable bodily health consequences.
  3. Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine application refused: FDA declines to review, impacting next-gen vaccine efforts.
  4. End of enhanced Obamacare subsidies: Threatens tribal health services and access for vulnerable groups.
  5. Physician Burnout Crisis: The American Hospital Association (AHA) is testifying before the Senate today, warning that "Washington’s rules" and administrative burdens are driving a national physician shortage and high rates of burnout.

  6. Primary Care Program Scrapped: Doctors are expressing frustration after the CMS Innovation Center scrapped the "Making Care Primary" program just months into what was supposed to be a 10-year initiative, citing a failure to meet savings goals.

  7. Disease Resurgence: In West Virginia, health officials have reported the first case of childhood Hepatitis B in years, which some doctors attribute to the erosion of traditional immunization requirements.

Sports
  1. Milan-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics Day 5: U.S. earns super-G silver; events include men's hockey, figure skating; Switzerland's Franjo takes a gold.
  2. NBA matchup: Knicks vs. 76ers in key Atlantic Division game, with injury concerns (e.g., Embiid questionable).
  3. College basketball: WVU aims to avoid letdown vs. UCF.
  4. NFL Draft outlook: Early 2026 rankings and team needs discussed post-Super Bowl.
  5. Winter Olympics (Milan-Cortina): Coverage continues from the Winter Games in Milan, though the atmosphere is somber following massive layoffs at major U.S. sports desks, including the virtual shuttering of the Washington Post’s legendary sports section.

  6. College Basketball Chaos: In a Big Ten thriller, No. 13 Purdue edged out No. 7 Nebraska 80-77 in overtime after the Boilermakers blew a 22-point lead.

  7. APEC Sports Initiatives: As part of the APEC meetings in China, officials are discussing new regional sports diplomacy programs aimed at fostering youth engagement across the Asia-Pacific.

These reflect the most recurring and prominent stories across global and U.S.-focused reporting today. News can evolve quickly!

EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here are the top education news stories for today, February 11, 2026.

Top US Education News

  • Federal Funding Restructuring Sparks Outrage: Tribal leaders and educators are strongly opposing a new plan to restructure Indian education programs. Following the dissolution of the Department of Education, responsibilities for these programs are being shifted to the Department of the Interior and the Department of Labor. Tribes argue they were not consulted appropriately on these major changes.

  • Accreditation Reform Negotiated Rulemaking: The Department of Education has announced its intention to establish a new committee to reform the higher education accreditation system. The goal is to simplify the recognition of accreditors and focus on data-driven student outcomes rather than DEI-based standards.

  • Controversial School Prayer Guidance: New federal guidance has been issued regarding prayer and religious expression in public schools. The guidelines clarify that teachers are permitted to pray with students, provided they do not pressure them to participate or favor specific religions.

  • FERPA Investigations Launched: The Department of Education has launched two investigations under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) to determine if student data was illegally shared with entities aiming to influence elections.


Top World Education News

  • Global Coalition Strengthening: The British Council has joined two major UNESCO-led initiatives: the Global Education Coalition and the International Task Force on Teachers for Education 2030. This partnership aims to enhance teaching quality, equity, and inclusive education worldwide.

  • UK Focus on "Super-Universities": Universities in the UK, such as Greenwich and Kent, are moving forward with merger plans to create "super-universities" to combat financial pressures and improve international competitiveness.

  • AI Integration Trends for 2026: Global reports indicate a major shift toward governed deployment of AI in education. Institutions are moving away from mere experimentation and focusing on using AI for workflow efficiency, instructional quality, and personalized learner support.

  • Diverse Study Destinations Rising: Due to policy shifts and visa restrictions in traditional Anglophone countries, international students are increasingly looking toward alternative destinations like Spain, which is launching initiatives to welcome transfer students.