Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Laura Loomer warns Trump on idea of Ghislaine Maxwell pardon: ‘Do not do it’

Far-right influencer’s comments on X came after president evidently left door open to pardoning the Epstein associate

Laura Loomer warns Trump on idea of Ghislaine Maxwell pardon: ‘Do not do it’

A noncommittal response from Donald Trump over whether he would pardon the convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell provoked a response from the president’s staunch ally and far-right influencer Laura Loomer.

“Do not do it,” Loomer wrote on X, tagging Trump, JD Vance and Pam Bondi, the US attorney general. “I repeat. Do not do it. There will be no coming back from that. I repeat again. For the love of God. Do Not Do It.”

Loomer’s rebuke came after Trump on Monday evidently left the door open to a pardon for Maxwell, a close associate of Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender and the president’s former friend. The US supreme court on Monday refused to hear an appeal from Maxwell against her conviction on charges of sex trafficking.

In response to media questioning about whether he may use his presidential pardon powers to free Maxwell from a 20-year prison sentence, Trump said he would need to “speak to” the US justice department.

“I haven’t heard the name in so long,” Trump said. “I can say this – that I’d have to take a look at it. I would have to take a look.”

Congressman Robert Garcia, a senior member of the House committee on oversight and government reform that in September released material connected to Epstein, welcomed the court’s refusal to hear an appeal.

Related: US supreme court declines to hear Ghislaine Maxwell’s appeal of sex-trafficking conviction

“The supreme court has correctly rejected Ghislaine Maxwell’s latest attempt to escape justice,” the California Democrat said. He also said it was “outrageous” that the Trump-led justice department in early August moved Maxwell from a federal in prison in Florida to a less restrictive facility in Texas amid speculation over whether she might benefit from presidential clemency.

That transfer came after Todd Blanche, the US deputy attorney general, met with Maxwell for an interview. Audio recordings and transcripts of the meeting were also released, but they yielded little new information – and Garcia’s statement called the decision to have that conversation with Maxwell as “shameful”.

Trump’s administration has spent much of his second presidency trying to contain a scandal surrounding its failure to fulfil a promise to release all of the federal government’s documentation on Epstein. Epstein died in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, and he previously had pleaded guilty to state charges in Florida of solicitation of a minor.

Bondi was grilled on the Epstein files during senate hearings on Tuesday. Asked by Democratic senator Dick Durbin of Illinois why she agreed to “flag records related to President Trump” in government-held files, Bondi hit back combatively: “I’m not going to discuss anything about that with you, Senator.”

Durbin shot back: “Eventually, you’re going to have to answer for your conduct in this. If not today, then eventually you will.”

The question derived from a Wall Street Journal report in July that claimed that “multiple” references to Trump were found in what Bondi called a “truckload” of documents related to Epstein.

“I would really appreciate the opportunity to correct the record, because senator Durbin knows I repeatedly asked for those flight logs, I brought up the subpoena. You even shut down the committee because you didn’t want that, I submitted that in writing, and you continue to misrepresent that,” Blackburn later chimed in.

The president on Monday also addressed the case of Sean “Diddy” Combs, the music mogul who on Friday was sentenced to four years and two months in prison after being convicted on federal prostitution-related charges. Combs was acquitted on more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking.

Trump claimed that Combs had reached out to him to ask for a pardon. But, referring to Combs by a moniker he dropped more than two decades ago, Trump suggested he had blown off the request.

“A lot of people have asked me for pardons,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “I call him Puff Daddy – [he] has asked me for a pardon.”

According to a letter from Combs’s legal team, he has petitioned to serve his sentence at Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Fort Dix, a low-security prison in New Jersey that offers a drug treatment program. Combs said at his sentencing that he had become addicted to painkillers after ankle surgery in 2000.

“In order to address drug abuse issues and to maximize family visitation and rehabilitative efforts, we request that the Court strongly recommend … that Mr Combs be placed at FCI Fort Dix,” Combs’s lawyer Teny Geragos wrote in part to Judge Arun Subramanian.

Subramanian has not issued a decision on where Combs will serve his sentence.

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