Raskin Exposes Patel's Flip-Flop on the Epstein List - Liberal Lens
Jamie Raskin confronts FBI Director Kash Patel with one of the most revealing contradictions in modern congressional oversight. Before taking charge of the FBI, Patel publicly accused the bureau of protecting Jeffrey Epsteins network, hiding the black book, and shielding powerful individuals connected to a global trafficking operation. He insisted the FBI director had full authority to release everything and he vowed that if he ever held that power, he would make the entire file public.
Two hundred days into his tenure, none of that has happened. And Raskin brings the receipts Patels own clips, his own claims, his own promises. What follows is a clash between past certainty and present responsibility. Patel now cites court orders, limited warrants, and legal constraints he once dismissed. Raskin pushes back, demanding to know why the man who accused the FBI of secrecy now defends that same secrecy from the inside.
This exchange exposes the gap between political rhetoric and the reality of governance. Raskin presses Patel on the seized computers, financial records, emails, documents, and investigative files the public still hasnt seen. Patel insists he has released everything lawfully permitted. Raskin points out that this contradicts what Patel said when he claimed full control over the Epstein materials.
This hearing raises a deeper question: What happens when someone who built his brand on demanding total transparency suddenly finds reasons not to deliver it? Raskin forces Patel to confront the promises he made and the expectations he created expectations he can no longer escape now that he holds the power he once claimed was the only thing standing between the public and the truth. - 11/27/2025.
https://pmatep5f7b.execute-api.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/ProdStage