Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins defends Epstein ‘no’ vote
Republican Rep. Clay Higgins of Lafayette, the only House lawmaker who voted against releasing documents associated with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Tuesday, said the legislation will hurt people who are named in the documents but did nothing wrong.
“It abandons 250 years of criminal justice procedure in America. As written, this bill reveals and injures thousands of innocent people — witnesses, people who provided alibis, family members, etc,” Higgins wrote on X after the vote.
The bipartisan bill passed the House with a 427 to 1 vote and received unanimous agreement from the Senate.
President Trump, who had tried to head off the House vote until bowing to pressure from his own party, has indicated he will sign the legislation.
Higgins, a Trump loyalist who said last week that he planned to vote against the bill, said the process of releasing the documents had been moving properly through the House Oversight Committee.
“The Oversight Committee is conducting a thorough investigation that has already released well over 60,000 pages of documents from the Epstein case,” he wrote on X. “That effort will continue in a manner that provides all due protections for innocent Americans.”
Higgins had said if the bill was amended in the Senate to “properly address privacy of victims and other Americans, who are named but not criminally implicated,” he would vote for it when it returned to the House.
Senate GOP leader John Thune had said changes to the bill were unlikely.
Latest News Stories
EXCLUSIVE: 5 years in, Operation Lone Star seizes 870 million lethal doses of fentanyl
Proposal to decrease reliance on paper documents passes House
Diaz Tosses Complete Game, TF South Runs Past Peotone 5-1
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Capital Improvements & IT Committee for March 3, 2026
Chicago can’t ditch airlines’ suit vs ‘disruptive’ paid sick leave rules
$4.4B budget request for new Illinois early childhood agency draws scrutiny
Lawmaker, officer warns Elgin officer firing could chill free speech
Illinois quick hits: Coalition calls for more action on data centers
IL House GOP asks “Have you had enough yet” following student’s murder
Gas spike continues for Illinoisans; state leaders offer no plan to help yet
Updated: St. John Woman Charged with Nine Counts of Murder in Crete Township Triple Homicide
Illinois lagging the nation for entrepreneurship, economic growth