
Katie Miller, the fierce and unapologetic wife of top Trump adviser Stephen Miller, put Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche on the hot seat during a recent episode of her podcast.
The grilling came just days before Blanche and Attorney General Pam Bondi were set to face the House Oversight Committee in a closed-door session on the long-overdue release of Jeffrey Epstein files.
Miller didn’t waste time getting to the heart of what many Americans are asking: where is the accountability?
Referencing the DOJ’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case and its sprawling web of elite connections, Miller framed the issue in stark terms.
“The moms are desperate to know because they want to be protectors of kids… Do you think you’ve failed them thus far?”
More from The Independent:
Blanche launched into a defense of the DOJ’s release of 3.5 million government documents on Epstein in compliance with the passage of the bipartisan Epstein Files Transparency Act through Congress late last year.
“I mean, no, not in any way, shape or form,” he answered. “When I hear this narrative that we are letting down victims or that we are failing victims… I want to make sure people know that every day we fight for victims.”
Moving on to the circumstances of Epstein’s death, which a coroner determined to be the result of suicide, Miller asked Blanche whether he accepted the ruling or believed he had been murdered at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Brooklyn.
[…]
“Do the cameras in the jail fail frequently or just in this specific case?” she asked. “No time of death was ever determined, only that his body was discovered [at] 6.30 a.m. the next morning. Why couldn’t investigators establish a clearer timeline?”
“That’s a good question,” Blanche conceded. “And it’s one of the failures, right? What happened with Epstein leads to these type of fair questions about what happened that night.”
Not finished there, Miller asked her guest whether any potential connection was ever investigated between Epstein and the notorious Pizzagate conspiracy theory, which evolved into the QAnon movement, and alleged that a secret sex trafficking operation existed, run by elite Democrats, including Hillary Clinton.
“Well the Pizzagate conspiracy theory has been debunked repeatedly by law enforcement, not by me, by law enforcement,” Blanche answered.
“Sure, it was totally debunked,” Miller came back. “And then you look at what happened with Epstein, where a wealthy, well-connected man was actually trafficking underage girls in elite circles. And then you begin to think, ‘Hmm, maybe things aren’t a real conspiracy theory?’”
The real fireworks, however, erupted when Miller turned to the elephant in the room: the blatant lack of accountability for the Deep State operatives who weaponized federal agencies against President Trump and the American people.
“Why haven’t we arrested Clapper, Comey, Brennan? So many traitors to our country. Why haven’t we done more to hold people accountable?” Miller demanded, echoing the frustration of millions who watched these figures lead endless witch hunts against Trump for purely political reasons.
Blanche’s response was cautious, some would say evasive.
Todd Blanche:
I think that—well, first of all—I’m not going to talk about any ongoing investigations, and I can’t. But I think the Attorney General, myself, and Director Patel are focused on nothing more than accountability.Katie Miller:
These are people who waged witch hunts against President Trump for purely political purposes. Yet I’m sure they’re all guilty of committing various crimes—which I know you can’t comment on, so we’ll give you a pass. But don’t you agree that we should hold people accountable who do these types of things?Todd Blanche:
I think there’s nothing more important in the Department of Justice than accountability. Yes, I agree with that.
WATCH:
Why hasn’t the FBI arrested Clapper, Comey, or Brennan?
There are many people who should be held accountable for their involvement in the Russia collusion hoax. pic.twitter.com/LSXJ3ubibX
— Katie Miller (@KatieMiller) March 21, 2026
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