In congressional hearings, witnesses may evade direct questions by referencing different documents than those asked about, creating gaps in the official record. When a confirmed client list exists but the witness refuses to confirm whether specific names appear on it by instead pointing to a released index, this pattern of evasive responses reveals potential discrepancies between what documents exist and what information has been publicly disclosed.
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Ted Liu Plays Epstein Clip in Hearing — Jim Jordin Freezes on the Client ListAdded:
He pressed play. No document on the table, no legal argument, no procedural motion. Ted Lieu pressed play on a video clip and waited. A journalist, a safe, a documented account of what Epstein was described as keeping inside it and showing to the journalist himself. Jim Corden had been through two full days of congressional testimony. He had navigated hours of questioning on files, court orders, releases, and frameworks.
His responses were structured, his answers calibrated. Then Ted Lieu asked one question about what that safe contained. Jim Corden's answer, "I'll accept your representation." Not a confirmation based on institutional knowledge, not a direct denial, a congressman's account of what Jim Corden's own institution had documented in 2019.
The pattern had entered the record before the most important questions had even been asked. 100 hours of recorded interviews, a confirmed list with two specific names, a safe that was front-page news in 2019, 5 minutes, three phrases that would not leave the room. "I'll accept your representation.
I don't know. The index will speak for itself." The hearing had been running across two consecutive days. Jim Corden had handled budget questions, document release protocols, legal frameworks, classification parameters. He had answered with the composure of someone who had spent years in these rooms and understood their architecture. Ted Lieu arrived for his allocated time without a document stack. He arrived with a sequence, each question more specific than the prior one. Each question building pressure from a different direction toward the same unresolved point. Jim Corden had prepared for standard terrain. What the preparation had not accounted for was a phrase becoming a pattern, a pattern becoming visible, a visible pattern becoming the record itself. Ted Lieu opened with the 2019 search. The FBI had searched the Manhattan residence. Among the items found was a safe. Is that correct? Jim Corden, "I'll accept your representation. I don't have the evidence catalog in front of me. The question moved one step forward. Inside that safe, agents had discovered a collection of photographs, documented in major press coverage, reported publicly, disclosed as part of the charges filed that year. Is that accurate? Jim Comey, I'll accept your representation. Ted Lieu did not move immediately past that response. A congressman had just supplied the institutional record of an FBI search to the person who leads the FBI. I'll accept your representation had now appeared twice. The director's own knowledge of a documented 2019 search had not been confirmed on its own terms inside either response. The question had been direct. The answer had moved around it. Ted Lieu pressed play on the clip. A journalist documented account of time spent with the subject before his arrest. A specific moment described. The subject producing photographs from a safe, spreading them across a surface, showing the journalist what he claimed they contained. Ted Lieu paused the clip. Are there any photographs of the kind described in that account connected to this operation? Jim Comey stated there were not. He added that such information would have been surfaced by multiple administrations and investigators across the last 20 years.
Ted Lieu stopped him. That is just not true. A documented birthday message had not been surfaced by the institution. It came to light through outside reporting.
When it did, the estate provided it to Congress, not the FBI. Jim Comey, you raise a great point. The exchange held there. Jim Comey had argued that two decades of institutional review would have produced any significant material.
Ted Lieu had placed one documented example of significant material not produced by that review. Jim Comey had agreed. You raise a great point was now in the record. It sat beside the 20-year review argument it had just confirmed as incomplete. The question had narrowed.
The answer had confirmed the gap. Ted Lieu moved to the 100 hours, not gradually, directly. A journalist had conducted approximately 100 hours of recorded interviews with the subject over several years before his arrest.
Those recordings existed, portions had been released publicly. Major news organizations had reported on their contents for years. Has the institution you represent subpoenaed those tapes?
Jim Cordin, I don't know. One pause, two seconds. Would it be beneficial for the institution to interview the journalist who conducted 100 hours of recorded conversations with the subject? Jim Cordin, I can't say they haven't already done so. I just don't know. I'll get back to you on that specifically. The person responsible for the institution's investigative decisions had stated under oath that he did not know whether his institution had made contact with the journalist holding the most extensive on-record interview archive of the subject in existence. 100 hours, known, publicly discussed, reported on for years. I don't know. Both were now in the same record. Ted Lieu moved to the estate. The documented birthday message had come from the estate, not from the institution. Ted Lieu asked whether the institution should subpoena the estate for the full scope of materials it holds. Jim Cordin, the estate is under no obligation to provide that material even pursuant to a subpoena. That is just false. Jim Cordin, that is literally not how it works. You hold subpoena authority. The estate's willingness to comply is a separate legal question. Your institution's authority to issue the subpoena is not the same question as the estate's obligation to respond. Jim Cordin held the combined framing. He did not separate the two positions on specific terms. The question had been about institutional authority. The answer had addressed estate obligation. Those were not the same procedural category. The gap remained. At this point in the exchange, a pattern had become visible.
Ted Lieu placed it into a single sequence without editorial inflation.
I'll accept your representation, twice, on the institution's own 2019 documented evidence. You raise a great point. After arguing that 20 years of review would have surfaced any significant material, I don't know on 100 hours of recorded interviews with the subject of the investigation. That is literally not how it works. In response to a question about institutional subpoena authority rather than a state obligation. Four responses, four questions. Each question had been specific. Each answer had moved to a different target than the one the question named. The same problem had returned in a different form across all four exchanges. 100 hours was still in the record, still unanswered on its specific terms. Ted Lieu shifted to the list. A list of names connected to the operation had been confirmed as existing in the institutional record. That confirmation had been entered earlier in the same proceeding. Is a specific documented individual, Prince Andrew, on the client list? Jim Jordan. The material related to that individual has been made public. The index was released. I asked whether his name appears on the client list. The index is not the client list. Is Prince Andrew on the client list? Jim Jordan. The index will speak for itself. Ted Lieu moved without pause. Is a second specific individual whose name has been publicly discussed in connection with this investigation on the client list? Jim Jordan. The index has been released. The index will speak for itself. Two direct yes or no questions. Two names. One response delivered twice. The index will speak for itself. The index and the client list were not the same document.
That distinction had been named inside the exchange. It had not been addressed inside the same exchange. The answer had not said yes. The answer had not said no. The answer had pointed to a different document than the one the question named. The index will speak for itself had now appeared twice. The first time was a response. The second time was a pattern. Ted Lieu closed his time by stating to the committee that it was a significant red flag that the official could not say whether a specific named individual appeared on a confirmed list.
The chair called time. The record now contained five documented gaps produced across five minutes. A 20-year review argument acknowledged as incomplete inside the same exchange that made it. A statement that 100 hours of documented recordings were unknown to the institution on the question of whether they had been pursued. A legal disagreement between institutional authority and a state obligation that was not resolved. And two yes or no questions about two specific names on a confirmed list, both answered by referencing a different document. None of those are interpretations.
They are the documented responses given under oath inside a five-minute exchange. What the exchange produced was not one explosive contradiction. It produced something more durable, a repeated structure. Each time the question became more specific, the answer became less specific. Not once, not twice, across every major pressure point in the sequence. I'll accept your representation addressed a question about what the institution found. I don't know addressed a question about what the institution had pursued. The index will speak for itself addressed a direct yes or no question about a specific name on a confirmed list. One reading of the exchange is that the respondent stayed within stated limits around sensitive ongoing investigative material. Another is that the questions were straightforward and the answers were not. But neither reading resolves the specific gap the transcript itself produced. The client list was confirmed to exist. Two names were asked about.
Both questions received the same response referencing a different document. If the answer to both questions is no, that is one word. That word was not said. The client list was confirmed by this institution earlier in this same proceeding. The confirmation is in the record. Jim Comey did not contest that. Two questions were asked about two specific names on that confirmed list. Both questions received the same response. The index will speak for itself twice. Jim Comey, the released index represents the public disclosure authorized through the appropriate review process. What was released and what was confirmed to exist are not the same documentary category.
The list was confirmed, the index was released. Those are two separate facts now sitting in the same record. Jim Jordan did not address the distinction between the confirmed existence of the list and the scope of what the index contained. He held the public disclosure framing. He did not move. The confirmed client list remained in the record. The two unanswered names remain beside it.
The index, a different document released through a separate process, had been offered as the answer to both. The gap between what was confirmed and what was released had not been addressed on its own specific terms inside the same exchange that produced it. What is in the confirmed client list that is not in the released index? The pattern produced by 5 minutes of testimony is permanent.
The index has been released, the list has been confirmed, and the distance between those two documents named inside the exchange, unaddressed inside the exchange, is the only question the record still needs answered. The index will speak for itself, but the client list has not been asked to speak yet.
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