Democrats Accuse Commerce Secretary Lutnick of Lying About Epstein Ties in House Interview
Congressional Democrats criticized Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick for lying about his ties to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein after he admitted the relationship lasted longer than he had previously disclosed.
Lutnick took part in a voluntary closed-door interview with the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday to answer questions about Epstein as part of the panel's probe into the disgraced financier.
"I feel very comfortable saying that Howard Lutnick is a pathological liar," Rep. Yassamin Ansari, D-Ariz., said as she left the room in the middle of the Capitol Hill testimony to update reporters.
She claimed the Trump official is complicit in "the most egregious cover-up in American history."
Democratic lawmakers accused Lutnick of stonewalling their questions during the sit-down. They have focused on the Epstein saga after largely ignoring it under former President Joe Biden.
"If Donald Trump had seen the video transcript, he would have fired Howard Lutnick," Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., insisted. "He's lost all credibility, and really it's a shame that the American people don't get to see what he did there — total lack of truth and lack of honesty."
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., accused Democrats of lying about Lutnick's testimony, which he called "very forthcoming." He admitted Lutnick was not "100% truthful" in the past.
"The only cover-up that I've seen on the Oversight Committee is the cover-up of the Democrats trying to cover up our investigations of the Metro Police Department lying about crime statistics, and the cover-up of the Minnesota fraud by Tim Walz and Keith Ellison and the cover-up of the hospice fraud in California," Comer said. He referred to several active probes under his purview.
A source familiar with the matter told Fox News that Lutnick told the panel he only met Epstein three times. Lutnick never saw Epstein with young women or witnessed anything inappropriate with young women, the source added.
Lutnick did not respond to reporters' questions outside the Oversight Committee room on Wednesday.
Democrats argued that Lutnick's acknowledgment of a brief lunch visit to Epstein's Caribbean island in 2012 with his wife, children and nannies undermined his credibility. He had previously claimed he cut off ties seven years earlier.
Lutnick told the New York Post last year that he had no contact with Epstein after 2005, when he and his wife had a brief meeting in the disgraced financier's apartment and saw the massage table.
Epstein files released this year showed Lutnick's relationship with Epstein extended well beyond that point. The commerce secretary told the House panel that his short visit to Epstein's island was "unsettling" because he did not know how Epstein's assistant knew he and his family were vacationing in the U.S. Virgin Islands at the time.
The two were next-door neighbors from 2005 until 2019, when Epstein died by suicide in a New York correctional center after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.
A spokesperson for the Commerce Department did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's inquiry on lawmakers' classification of Lutnick's testimony.
Comer acknowledged Wednesday that Lutnick withheld information about the 2012 lunch with Epstein but argued that his credibility is up to Americans to decide.
"I haven't seen wrongdoing in the email correspondence, but he wasn't 100% truthful with whether or not he had been on the island," Comer told reporters.
"We're going to ask him all these questions, and we'll let the American people judge whether the credibility was damaged or not," he added.
The Trump administration has largely stood by Lutnick amid calls for his resignation from Democrats and a handful of Republicans, including Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky.
Comer said his invitation to Lutnick, a Cabinet secretary, shows the bipartisan nature of the Epstein probe.
"There's never been a chairman bring in Cabinet secretaries of their own party," he told Fox News. "We have Pam Bondi coming in in a couple of weeks. So, I think people can see that this is a bipartisan investigation. We're really sincerely trying to get the truth. Our goal is to provide justice for the victims and, hopefully, today will be helpful."
Former Attorney General Pam Bondi is scheduled for a transcribed interview with the committee on May 29. Tech billionaire Bill Gates is slated to testify on June 10.
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