
Meadows plays both sides of January 6 probe while clock ticks on investigation
CNN
Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows on Tuesday became the latest Donald Trump acolyte to bow to the former President's ire, begging out of his scheduled deposition with the House committee investigating the January 6 riot -- despite having given over key documents that will help build their case.
But even as he dodges a face-to-face meeting, congressional investigators aren't done with Meadows. They plan to move forward with the former North Carolina congressman's scheduled interview on Wednesday, and possibly seek criminal contempt charges if he follows through on his planned no-show -- setting up a legal clash that could land him in court, like fellow Trump ally Steve Bannon.

Friday featured yet another drop in the drip-drip-drip of new information from the Jeffrey Epstein files. This time: new pictures released by House Democrats that feature Donald Trump and other powerful people like Bill Clinton, Steve Bannon and Richard Branson, culled from tens of thousands of photos from Epstein’s estate.












