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
DEA surge against cartel turns up fentanyl, millions in cash, guns
Illinois quick hits: Woman charged in Metro East murder; taxpayer funded homeowner relief fund announced
WATCH: Former state lawmakers endorse, donors support GOP candidate Dabrowski
Louisiana native awaits Senate confrmation
Portland protests Trump’s plan to send federal troops to protect ICE facilities
With potential mass transit service cuts looming, IL legislators seek reforms
Trump asks Supreme Court to review birthright citizenship case again
Trump’s limited drug tariffs might not bring back U.S. manufacturing
Government shutdown deadline days away, but Dems don’t budge on demands
Report: 25 state governments don’t have enough money to pay their bills
Officials react to DOJ voter roll lawsuit
Defense says more time needed for Tyler Robinson case
Tribal members want 15 minutes for oral arguments in tariff case
Welfare reform pilot to reduce government dependency is ‘step forward’, scholar says