The Megyn Kelly Show - Trump Signs Epstein Bill, MBS and Elon Visit White House, Comey Case in Jeopardy: AM Update 11/20
Episode Date: November 20, 2025Attorney General Pam Bondi fields questions about the next steps in disclosures on the Epstein files, which could come within the next month. President Trump courts massive Saudi investment during Cro...wn Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s first White House visit in seven years. The criminal case against former FBI Director James Comey teeters after a dramatic courtroom revelation about irregularities in how the indictment was approved. A sympathetic media profile of a 79-year-old man caught up in the immigration crackdown omits key details of his criminal past, including a rape conviction. Lean: Visit https://BrickhouseSale.com for 30% off Walmart: Learn how Walmart is fueling the future of U.S. manufacturing at https://Walmart.com/America-at-work Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Good morning, everyone. I'm Emily Dershinsky, host of After Party and the Megan Kelly
Wrapup show on Sirius XM Channel 111. It's Thursday, November 20th, 2025, and this is your AM update.
We will continue to follow the law again while protecting victims, but also providing maximum
transparency. With the passage of the Jeffrey Epstein Files Bill in Congress, new questions over
whether a fresh DOJ probe could limit what's revealed.
Elon Musk returns to the White House as President Trump throws a ritzie dinner for the Saudi
crown prince.
This was gobsnacking.
It was absolute silence.
The criminal case against former FBI director James Comey hangs in the balance following a dramatic
moment in court.
And a story about an elderly man swept up in the illegal immigration crackdowns is not as
the media would like you to think.
All that and more coming up in just a moment.
on your AM update.
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Yesterday morning, the Senate officially sending the Epstein Files Transparency Act to the White
House for President Trump's signature.
Mr. Trump signing the bill into law on Wednesday.
After months of resistance, President Trump changing his mind last weekend, calling on
Congress to pass the bill. In an effort to move on from the case, he calls a, quote, Democrat hoax
and an attempt to deflect from the White House's success. Whether the passage of the bill will have
that effect remains to be seen. With the president's signature, the DOJ will have 30 days to turn
over all Jeffrey Epstein-related materials, with the exception of classified information,
child sex abuse material, and information identifying victims, and anything tied to an ongoing
investigation. Earlier this month, President Trump ordering Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate
Epstein's connections to Democrats, including former President Bill Clinton and tech billionaire Reed
Hoffman. A.G. Bondi, in turn, assigning the probe to U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton in the Southern
District of New York. Yesterday at a press conference, A.G. Bondi
questioned on whether the DOJ will withhold any materials.
The Epstein files, does the new investigation by the Southern District of New York,
U.S. attorney, prevent the department from releasing all of the remaining files?
So we have released 33,000, over 33,000 Epstein documents to the Hill, and we'll continue
to follow the law and to have maximum transparency. Also, we will always encourage all victims
to come forward.
When you say follow the law of the Attorney General, do you mean that you will provide all the files by 30 days?
We will follow the law.
The law passed both chambers last evening.
It has not yet been signed, but we will continue to follow the law again while protecting victims, but also providing maximum transparency.
The bill requiring the DOJ to explain any redactions or withheld materials in a report within 15 days of the
files being released, barring the exclusion of any materials, quote, on the basis of embarrassment,
reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure,
or foreign dignitary.
President Trump, yesterday speaking at the U.S. Saudi Investment Forum in D.C., one day after hosting
Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad bin Salman at the White House, part of a broader effort to redefine
U.S. relations with the Middle East. The prince visiting the White House for the first time in seven
years, his last visit coming before the murder of Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi
in Istanbul in 2018. President Trump's strategy in the region underscored during a diplomatic swing
through the Middle East earlier this year, mending fraught relationships through business deals and
investments. At the White House yesterday, MBS announcing Saudi investment into the U.S.
will rise to $1 trillion.
President Trump, yesterday at the Kennedy Center,
touting a global wave of investment into the U.S.
My message to all of the leaders and investors with us today,
and they are the best in the world, is very simple.
Under the Trump administration, America's back,
and America is open for business.
In four long years, Joe Biden secured less than $1 trillion.
dollars. In nine short months, I've secured $18 trillion to rebuild our factories, create
hundreds of thousands of jobs, and bring back those beautiful words made in America. So think of
that. He did less than a trillion in four years. And in nine months, we've done more than $18 trillion,
okay? That's called success. On Tuesday, President Trump and MBS signing six,
several major agreements, including the sale of tanks and F-35 fighter jets to Saudi Arabia.
Mr. Trump also elevating the Saudis to major non-NATO ally status, a designation streamlining
arms transfers and deepening security cooperation. Later that evening, President Trump hosting
a formal dinner in honor of MBS, attended by dozens of high-profile guests, including
Elon Musk, marking Musk's first visit back to the White House since his public split with
Mr. Trump earlier this year. Also, in attendance, NVIDIA CEO, Jensen Wong, Apple CEO Tim Cook,
sales forces, Mark Benioff, and Wall Street heavyweights, including Bill Ackman and Blackstone
CEO Stephen Schwartzman. And of all the power players in the room, the biggest burst of
attention landing on global soccer superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, who plays professional.
professionally in Saudi Arabia and is the most followed person on Instagram with 668 million followers,
President Trump giving him a special shoutout.
This room is loaded up with the biggest leaders in the world, business, sports.
You know, my son is a big fan of Ronaldo, wherever Ronaldo is here with Ronaldo.
And Barron got to meet him, and I think he respects his father a little bit more now,
just the fact that I introduced you.
So I just want to thank you both for being here.
Thank you very much.
MBS closing out the remarks with this tribute to Mr. Trump.
Today it's a special day.
We think the horizon of the economical cooperation between Saudi Arabia and America,
it's bigger and wider in many areas.
We've been signing a lot of agreement that's going to open the door
to develop the relation deeper in many areas,
and we're going to work on it.
We believe the opportunities is huge.
So we're going to focus on implementation
and keep increasing the opportunities between our both,
country. So thank you again, Mr. President.
Coming up, the fate of former FBI director James Comey's criminal case in question following a
dramatic day in court. And a story about an elderly man caught up in the immigrant crackdown
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The criminal case against former FBI director James Comey hanging in the balance
as a federal judge questions whether Comey was properly indicted.
The case brought by U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan in the Eastern District of Virginia,
Comey's legal team back in court yesterday, pursuing one of its multiple legal theories
to get the case tossed.
Earlier this month, Comey's team challenging Halligan's appointment and
sought access to secret grand jury proceeding materials for evidence of potential prosecutorial
misconduct. Yesterday, Comey's team arguing this case amounts to vindictive prosecution, a high legal
bar, as explained here by CNN legal analyst Ellie Honig. You essentially have to show that you've
chosen, singled out for prosecution, either because of your political views or because somebody
in the government, in this case the president, hates you. Now, I've seen plenty of emotions brought
along these lines. They're almost always rejected by judges. However, the case that Jim Comey has here
is really the strongest one that I've seen in recent history for dismissal based on selective
or vindictive prosecution. You can never predict that somebody's going to win on these motions,
John, because they're always long shots, but Comey's got as good or better chance as anyone I've
ever seen. Comy's attorney, Michael Driban, telling U.S. judge Michael Knockmanoff,
the case against Comey stems from protected speech
and President Trump's animosity toward him.
Dreeven accusing President Trump
of crossing a line using the, quote, full weight
of the criminal justice system against Comey.
Comey's team submitting more than 50 pages of comments
made by President Trump about the former FBI director
over the years as evidence of vindictive prosecution,
including a September Truth Social Post
addressing Attorney General Pam Bondi, quote,
Pam, I have reviewed over 30 statements and posts saying that,
essentially, same old story as last time all talk, no action,
nothing is being done.
What about Comey, Adam, Shifty Schiff, Letitia,
they're all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done.
Justice must be served now.
DOJ prosecutor Tyler Lemons, arguing there is no proof.
Halligan acted because of President Trump's truth social post,
and the case was indeed brought because Comey lied to.
Congress. Judge Nachmanoff also pressing the DOJ on whether career officials initially recommended
against prosecuting Comey. Lemons declining to answer, saying that information is privileged and could
not be shared without permission from the higher-ups, although he acknowledged he had seen drafts of
memos arguing for and against prosecuting Comey. Judge Nachmanoff pressing the DOJ on an emerging
irregularity on how the indictment itself was secured. In September,
Halligan presenting the case to a grand jury initially seeking three charges against Comey.
The panel rejecting one of the charges and approving two. But today we learned that
Halligan then revised the indictment to reflect the two approved charges, but she never brought
it to the full grand jury for reapproval. Instead, Halligan had the revised charging document
signed by the four-person in the presence of just one other grand juror. Halligan confirming
to the judge that the revised indictment had not been seen by the full grand jury.
CNN reporter Caitlin Pullance, who was in the courtroom, describing the significance of that moment.
I've been in a lot of these hearings in politically charged cases over the years.
This was gobsnacking. It was absolute silence. I've said before in this case that there have been
moments where people gasped. But this was, you could see the entire room shift. And from then on,
This was the only thing that was mattering in that case.
This is the only thing that the judge and that others were talking about.
The DOJ's lemons arguing the revised indictment was necessary because of the declined charge on the initial document.
Quote, they really had no other way to return it.
Comey's attorney pouncing on the moment, telling the court, quote,
there is no indictment and pointing out the statute of limitations is now expired.
Judge Nachmanoff ending the hearing without a ruling, requesting more information from the DOJ about Halligan's handling of the indictment.
The DOJ responding in a Wednesday evening filing, quote, the grand jury foreperson as the representative of the grand jury,
endorsed the revised two-count indictment by signing it and explaining on the record in open court that the indictment reflected the vote of the grand jury,
The constitutional function and purpose of the grand jury in all possible respects
was achieved and respected in this indictment.
The trial is set for January for now.
A sympathetic news report out of Florida drawing scrutiny,
the Orlando Sentinel publishing a lengthy feature portraying a 79-year-old man
as an innocent victim of President Trump's illegal immigration crackdown,
while downplaying a criminal history, including a rape convoluting,
The peace begins with Paul John Boyersky, born in a German refugee camp to Polish parents
one year after the end of World War II, legally moving to the U.S. with his family when he was five.
Quote, more than seven decades later, the 79-year-old Sanford Florida grandfather, still a man
without a country, found himself in legal limbo in the Alligator-Alcatraz detention camp in the
Everglades, picked up on a decades-old deportation order authorities, had previously,
chosen not to enforce. Boryerski later transferred from Alligator Alcatraz to another holding
facility in Miami. The Sentinel highlighting Bayerski's health struggles, complaints about treatment
from guards, and lack of hot meals. The toll of Buryerski's family also featured prominently,
his stepdaughter, moving back in with her elderly mother to help her through the ordeal.
The piece carefully documents Buryerski's long record of check-ins with immigration officials.
According to the Sentinel in July, ICE telling Bayerski that if he did not voluntarily leave the country, he would be deported, quote, but he could not make such plans as he has no passport and no country to return to.
It is true that Bayersky's birth circumstances are unusual, but the Sentinel does not describe any steps taken by him or his attorney to comply with ICE's explicit instruction to self-deport.
But why is Bergerzky, who came here legally, under a deportation order to begin with?
By scrolling all the way down, the reader learns in paragraph 28 that Bergerzky was arrested in
1966 for larceny, and again in 1967, for receiving stolen goods, leading to a deportation
order in 1968.
Bergerzky was released from prison and permitted to apply for work authorization because West
Germany, where he was born, and Poland, where his parents are from, refused to take him.
Just a few years later, in 1972, Bayerski was convicted of rape, sentenced to three years in prison,
his wife telling the sentinel he was innocent and swept up in a case involving other young men.
The Sentinel offering no independent corroboration and does not address the conviction beyond her claim.
Bolyerski's lawyer now challenging the detention, requesting his client's release on bond,
while pursuing additional avenues to secure legal status.
Judge Romy Lerner on Tuesday, declining to make a decision saying she needed more time to consider
the complex case.
Bayersky remains in the Miami detention facility for now.
The timeline on the judge's decision is unclear.
A DHS official telling the court if Bayerski's current deportation is declared no longer
valid, the government will issue a new one, seeking deportation to a third country.
That'll do it for your AM update. I'm Emily Jashinsky, host of AfterParty, catch the Megan Kelly
show live on SiriusXM's The Megan Kelly Channel 11 at noon east on YouTube.com slash Megan Kelly
and all podcast platforms.
