Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins defends Epstein ‘no’ vote
LouisianaRepublican Rep. Clay Higgins of Lafayette, the only U.S. House of Representatives lawmaker who voted against releasing documents associated with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Tuesday, said the legislation will hurt people named in the documents who did nothing wrong.
“It abandons 250 years of criminal justice procedure in America,” Higgins wrote on social media after the vote. “As written, this bill reveals and injures thousands of innocent people – witnesses, people who provided alibis, family members, etc.”
The bipartisan bill passed 427-1 and received unanimous agreement from the Senate.
President Donald Trump, who had tried to head off the House vote until bowing to pressure from his 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 social media. “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 of South Dakota had said changes to the bill were unlikely.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: GOP leader calls Pritzker’s accountability commission a ‘political stunt’
Unions sue Trump over immigrant drivers license crackdown
Battery storage financials remain in question as lawmakers consider energy omnibus
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker praises credit upgrade; Cook County approves $20M quantum grant
Op-Ed: Main Street businesses, customers would bear brunt of a tax on services
Supreme Court grants extra time for arguments in tariff case
WATCH: White House vows to ‘fight’ lawsuits over $100,000 H-1B visa fee
WATCH: Illinois leaders on both sides send Bailey family condolences for loss of 4
Democrats tank GOP bill to pay troops, essential workers during govt shutdown
Texas lawmaker introduces agricultural visa reform
Home sales rise 1.5% in September as mortgage rates dip
FBI arrests 34 in NBA, poker gambling probe involving crime families