‘A Cover-Up, Pure and Simple’: Judge Roberts Exposes Bondi’s Destruction of Epstein Evidence in Scathing 130-Page Ruling
WASHINGTON, D.C. — In a devastating legal blow that has sent shockwaves through the Department of Justice, Chief Justice John Roberts has issued a searing 130-page ruling that lays bare what he describes as Attorney General Pam Bondi’s “clear obstruction of justice” in the Jeffrey Epstein case. The ruling, delivered Monday, reveals that Bondi allegedly ordered the destruction of critical evidence after a federal court had explicitly ordered its preservation.
The findings are nothing short of explosive.
According to the ruling, Bondi directed DOJ officials to purge thousands of documents related to Epstein’s powerful co-conspirators—records that were under active federal preservation orders. The destroyed materials reportedly included internal memos, emails, and investigative analyses that detailed exactly how Epstein and his network operated with impunity for decades.
“This isn’t just a scandal,” Roberts wrote in a passage that legal experts are already calling historic in its bluntness. “This is a calculated, deliberate effort to shield powerful individuals from accountability by erasing the very evidence that Congress and the courts have demanded to see.”

The ruling directly implicates Bondi in what Roberts describes as a coordinated cover-up reaching the highest levels of the Trump administration. The destroyed evidence, the court found, contained “critical information about Epstein’s abusers, enablers, accomplices, and co-conspirators”—precisely the names that Congress mandated be made public under the Epstein Files Transparency Act passed in November 2025.
A Pattern of Concealment
The ruling paints a damning portrait of systematic obstruction. Despite a federal law requiring the DOJ to release all six million pages of Epstein-related documents within 30 days, Bondi has produced barely half that amount . The 200,000 pages she continues to withhold, Roberts noted, are “exactly the documents Congress needs”—internal deliberations about charging decisions, discussions of which wealthy figures were implicated, and analyses of how Epstein avoided serious prosecution for so long .
“The pattern is unmistakable,” Roberts wrote. “When the law demanded transparency, the Attorney General ordered redactions. When Congress issued subpoenas, she claimed privileges that do not exist under the statute. And when a court ordered preservation, she ordered destruction.”
The ruling cites Bondi’s February testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, where she aggressively filibustered and refused to answer basic questions about the Epstein files . At that hearing, Bondi admitted that hundreds of attorneys had reviewed millions of pages but claimed an impossibly low “error rate” for redactions—a defense Roberts dismissed as “statistically implausible and factually unsupported.”
The Missing Evidence

Perhaps most troubling are the specific categories of evidence now confirmed destroyed. According to court documents, Bondi personally signed off on eliminating:
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Emails between DOJ officials discussing whether to investigate Lex Wexner, Epstein’s longtime financial backer
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FBI interview summaries containing allegations against powerful political figures
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Internal analyses of why prosecutors declined to pursue charges against named co-conspirators
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Records documenting communications between Epstein’s circle and current administration officials
The destruction order came despite a House Oversight Committee subpoena explicitly rejecting the very privileges Bondi later asserted to justify withholding documents . The subpoena clearly warned that “the House doesn’t recognize the deliberative process privilege, the attorney-client privilege, and attorney work product protections” in this investigation.
Bipartisan Fury
The ruling has galvanized rare bipartisan action. Just last week, the House Oversight Committee voted 24-19 to subpoena Bondi, with five Republicans joining all Democrats . Representative Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), who introduced the motion, declared on social media: “AG Bondi will testify about missing Epstein evidence. The videos, the audio, the documents the DOJ is hiding. The American people deserve transparency. Survivors deserve justice. Accountability is coming” .
Representative Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), the committee’s ranking Democrat, was even more direct during Bondi’s February hearing: “You’re running a massive Epstein cover-up right out of the Department of Justice” .

Impeachment Proceedings Loom
The legal fallout is accelerating rapidly. Representative Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.) has already filed articles of impeachment against Bondi, accusing her of “obstruction of justice” and “obstruction of Congress” . The articles specifically cite her “illegally withholding millions of Epstein Files” despite a congressional mandate for full disclosure.
“Her conduct is a spit in the face to survivors everywhere, and we cannot allow it to continue,” Thanedar said in a statement .
The impeachment effort follows revelations that Bondi’s DOJ has also been secretly tracking what members of Congress searched for when given private access to unredacted Epstein files . “Bondi’s not in the justice business,” wrote USA Today columnist Chris Brennan. “She’s in the cover-up business” .
What Was Destroyed?
Court documents suggest the destroyed evidence included materials directly relevant to ongoing investigations of Epstein’s extensive network. The financier, who died in federal custody in 2019, maintained close ties to top business executives, politicians, celebrities, and academics. His longtime accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence, but victims and investigators have long suspected that many co-conspirators escaped prosecution.

The Epstein Files Transparency Act, passed with 427 votes in the House and signed reluctantly by President Trump, explicitly forbade shielding powerful figures “on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity” . Roberts’ ruling suggests Bondioverrode that mandate through what he called “extrajudicial destruction of evidence.”
The Road Ahead
Chief Justice Roberts has ordered an immediate forensic audit of DOJ servers to determine the full scope of destroyed materials. He also warned that further obstruction could result in criminal contempt referrals.
For Epstein’s victims, who have waited years for accountability, the ruling offers both validation and renewed pain. Many attended Bondi’s February hearing, only to watch her refuse to turn and acknowledge them . While Bondi eventually expressed sorrow for their suffering, she has consistently declined to explain why so many names remain redacted—or, it now appears, why so much evidence no longer exists.
“The question,” Roberts wrote, “is no longer whether there was a cover-up. The question is how high it goes, and whether anyone will be held accountable for it.”
As Congress prepares for what promises to be a historic confrontation, one thing is clear: the Epstein files scandal has moved far beyond questions of transparency. With a sitting attorney general now accused of destroying court-ordered evidence, the foundations of the Justice Department itself may be at stake.