Trump calls Epstein birthday letter a ‘dead issue’

Washington – President Donald Trump refused to discuss the letter to the sex offender sentenced Jeffrey Epstein that the Democrats of the Chamber released on Monday, calling him “dead problem”.
“I don’t comment on something that is a dead problem,” Trump told NBC News during a brief telephone call on Tuesday morning. “I made all the comments to the staff. This is a dead problem.”
He refused to discuss the question more.
The Democrats of the Chamber’s Supervisory Committee published on X an image of an obscene note that Trump would have sent Epstein for his 50th anniversary. The letter was part of a multitude of documents published on Monday, which arise from an assignment of the committee led by the GOP sent to the succession of Epstein
The president denied having written the letter. The managers of the White House rejected it on Monday, arguing that the signature did not correspond to the current signature of the president. Previous cases of the president’s signature, however, seem similar to the signing of the letter.
The letter, which would have been sent in 2003, was reported for the first time by the Wall Street Journal. The president in July continued the parent company of the review, the publisher and two journalists for defamation. The newspaper said he is holding his subjects.
The letter depicts the outline of a naked woman with the first name of Trump signed in the pubic area. The note presents a conversation between Trump and Epstein, with Trump saying: “We have certain things in common, Jeffrey”.
The letter ends with a representation of Trump saying: “A boyfriend is a wonderful thing. Happy birthday – and maybe another wonderful secret.”

The Epstein number has shaken Washington for months, discovering a ditch between the Republicans who are generally in locking behind the White House messaging. Trump has tried several times to minimize history, even if some of its Maga allies continue to put pressure for transparency.
Democratic legislators and a handful of their republican counterparts are trying to collect signatures which could ultimately force a vote as to whether the Ministry of Justice must publish more Epstein files.
The representative Thomas Massie, r-ky., Co-put the effort with the representative Ro Khanna, D-Calif. Among the signatories are three Republicans who are generally allied with Trump’s messaging: Nancy Mace representatives of Southern Caroline, Marjorie Taylor Greene de Georgie and Lauren Boebert from Colorado.




