What happens when one of Donald Trump’s most loyal allies starts to question how the administration is handling one of the most explosive scandals in recent memory? We may be witnessing just that—and the situation is far from quiet.
FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino reportedly had a heated exchange with Attorney General Pam Bondi regarding the Jeffrey Epstein files, and the aftermath has sparked widespread speculation. According to sources, Bongino was so upset over Bondi’s lack of transparency that he took Friday off, prompting talk that he may have resigned altogether.
“He ain’t coming back,” a source close to Bongino told Axios.
According to the report, both Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel are “furious” at Bondi due to the backlash they’ve faced over her handling of the Epstein case. And it’s not hard to see why.
Inside the room: During a meeting, Bongino was pressed about a NewsNation article claiming he and Patel had pushed for more disclosure on Epstein but were held back. Bongino denied leaking anything.
“Pam said her piece. Dan said his piece. It didn’t end on friendly terms,” said one individual briefed on the confrontation. Bongino reportedly left in anger.
“The fact is, Dan was for releasing the information with the video and had no problem until he got heat online,” a senior administration official told Axios.
“Bongino found the video with the missing minute. He vouched for it after a ‘thorough review,’ he said, and he thought this would end the matter. When that didn’t work, he lost his mind and ran out of D.C.”
A source supportive of Bongino added, “Dan is not the bad guy here. He shouldn’t take the fall.”
Adding to the tension, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche publicly defended the memo in question, stating that everyone in leadership had signed off.
I worked closely with @FBIDirectorKash and @FBIDDBongino on the joint FBI and DOJ memo regarding the Epstein Files. All of us signed off on the contents of the memo and the conclusions stated in the memo. The suggestion by anyone that there was any daylight between the FBI and…
— Todd Blanche (@DAGToddBlanche) July 11, 2025
But when top officials feel the need to publicly proclaim unity, it’s usually a sign that unity is lacking.
The Department of Justice maintains that the newly enhanced video footage supports the suicide ruling. They claim the FBI adjusted contrast, color, and sharpness to improve “clarity.” But the public is expected to simply trust their word.
The conclusions of the DOJ memo are hard for many to accept: no client list, no blackmail, no further investigations? Epstein’s entire operation was built on compromising powerful individuals. Suggesting he acted alone stretches plausibility to its breaking point.
The American public deserves more than spin and internal bickering. They want answers, not a memo that creates more doubts. Bongino and Patel seem to understand that. This controversy isn’t just about Epstein’s death—it’s about restoring faith in a justice system that claims no one is above the law.
The fact that the memo had to be leaked rather than released says everything. Public trust isn’t won through damage control and selective disclosures.
If Bondi believes that a sanitized memo will silence the outrage, she’s misjudging the mood—badly. The people, and even her colleagues, want the full truth. And when someone like Bongino is taking days off in frustration, it’s clear the administration’s strategy is failing.