'Where is it?' Elon Musk ramps up his fight against Trump for Epstein evidence
Elon Musk leaves following a luncheon with members of the Senate Republican Conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 5, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura REFILE - QUALITY REPEAT

Elon Musk stepped up his attacks on President Donald Trump over his association with Jeffrey Epstein.

The tech mogul has been posting about the president's ties to the disgraced financier since their falling out in late May, and Wednesday evening he amplified posts attacking attorney general Pam Bondi for walking back her claims about Epstein's alleged "client list."

"Where is Phase 2?" Musk posted just after midnight EST, referring to a potential follow-up to documents distributed by Bondi at a White House event in February to conservative influencers about the Epstein case.

Bondi had been teasing the release of additional documents related to the sex trafficking case until last week, when the Department of Justice unceremoniously announced, contradicting conspiracy theories about the matter, that Epstein had killed himself in jail and had not kept a "client list," and Trump has been ordering his MAGA followers to stop asking questions about the case.

"Bullseye," Musk posted just before midnight, amplifying an explanation by the xAI chatbot Grok showing that Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Alan Dershowitz, Kevin Spacey and Chris Tucker had flown on Epstein's plane to his private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Trump, who was friends with Epstein for years until they fell out over a real estate deal in the early 2000s, flew on his plane multiple times but not to the island, according to the chatbot's analysis, but Musk amplified another post that laid out the FBI's scrupulous rules for protecting evidence from possible mishandling.

"Yeah, where is it?" Musk posted in response.

That post, by the widely followed entrepreneur Mario Nawfal, gave an exhaustive explanation of the FBI's rules for chain of custody to preserve evidence, and then concluded that the Department of Justice was covering up the evidence it had gathered against Epstein and his associates.

"So what happenend [sic] to the mountain of evidence?" Nawfal posted.