South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace announced plans to subpoena former U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, asserting the Department of Justice has withheld critical documents in the investigation of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Bondi has maintained that the DOJ has released all relevant files connected to Epstein’s network. Mace countered that assertion, calling the case “one of the greatest cover-ups in American history” and claiming that the government has not delivered the full truth.

“Three million documents have been released, and we still don’t have the full truth,” Mace said. She alleged that videos, audio recordings, and logs remain missing and that millions more documents have yet to see the light of day.

Mace criticized the Justice Department for appearing more focused on shielding the powerful than pursuing justice for Epstein’s victims. “The American people deserve answers, victims deserve justice. HOLD. THE. LINE,” she said.

She argued that this is not merely a matter of public curiosity but a fundamental accountability issue: that the full scope of Epstein’s global sex trafficking network has been systematically obscured, leaving victims without closure and raising questions about who benefited from the cover-up.

The congresswoman, who is also running for Governor of South Carolina, has framed the subpoena effort as part of a broader push for transparency and accountability in cases involving high-profile figures and alleged systemic failures within federal agencies. She pledged to continue pressing federal authorities until all remaining documents, evidence, and communications are made available to investigators, Congress, and the public.