House Oversight Chair James Comer has raised eyebrows surrounding the Epstein files saga.
āI fear the report will be like the Warren Report,ā the 53-year-old said in an interview with Politico, referring to the 1964 report on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. āNobody will ever believe it.ā
āThereās so many conspiracy theories,ā he added.
The concerns were a significant reason he āwasnāt excited about doing the investigation,ā he added, while admitting he still has not committed to the Oversight Committee releasing a final report, only telling Politico that it will happen āeventually, I would assume.ā
The Daily Beast has contacted Comerās office for comment.

Comer, in his role as chair of the House Oversight Committee, has overseen the probe into Jeffrey Epsteinās crimes, including the release of the convicted sex traffickerās 50th birthday book and more than 20,000 pages of documents belonging to his estate.
He also spearheaded the investigation into then-President Joe Biden, including looking into his familyās business dealings and Bidenās alleged mental decline, but neither produced meaningful results.
Comer, a Trump loyalist, has sought to minimize the damage the presidentās relationship with Epstein has had on his reputation, refuting claims that the probe has been damaging for Trump despite turning up substantial evidence of the presidentās friendship with the financier.

A senior White House official told Politico that Trump ālikes James Comer a lot,ā despite his involvement in the probe. āIn fact, I spoke with [Trump] recently about [Comer] and he said heās always been good and with him all the way. Thereās no problems there,ā they added.
In what many viewed as a distraction, the Kentucky congressman announced on Friday that he would be deposing former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton next month because of their ties to both Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
The House Oversight Committeeās probe also provided House Republicans with cover as they fought against legislation that would force the release of the Epstein files, allowing them to use the probe as evidence they were taking the case seriously.
The GOP eventually caved after Trump said he would sign the legislation if it would allow people to āmove onā from the issue and focus on his accomplishments instead.

With the billās successful passage, the Trump administration now has less than a month to release the files publicly.
Comer, meanwhile, is ānot quite sureā what the logical endpoint of the investigation might be, although he remains hopeful that bank records he has subpoenaed will bear fruit.
He has also tasked women on the House Oversight Committee with meeting with Epsteinās victims in order to obtain the identities of his rich and powerful accomplices, a move an attorney representing some of the victims has condemned.

āWhy are we putting the burden on them?ā Jennifer Freeman asked.
āIf there is no Epstein list, and the American people expect us to compose an Epstein list, if we donāt get any names from the victims, itās going to be hard to do,ā Comer told Politico.






