• What Happened: James O'Keefe's investigative team recorded a former DOJ investigator on a hidden camera while he thought he was on a date, and what he said about Bill Clinton and the Epstein files will make your jaw drop.
  • Why It Matters: This man had top-level federal clearances and claims he personally interviewed Epstein's victims, and his words about Clinton are about as explosive as it gets.
  • Bottom Line: The DOJ is calling him a liar, he's calling himself unreliable, but the tape is out and America is watching.

James O'Keefe's team pointed a camera at a former Department of Justice investigator who spent years overseeing sensitive federal probes. What they captured on hidden camera may be the biggest Epstein bombshell yet.

On September 24, 2025, O'Keefe released undercover footage recorded by a female operative on his team. Her target: Glenn Prager, a former Department of Justice investigator with top-level federal clearances. Prager thought he was on a date. He wasn't.

From 2005 to 2011, Prager served as an OIG Inspector overseeing sensitive federal investigations into the FBI, DEA, ATF, Bureau of Prisons, U.S. Marshals Service, and U.S. Attorney's Offices. He later became Inspector General for Arizona's $9 billion Medicaid program before moving to the private sector.

Sitting across from O'Keefe's undercover reporter, Prager let it all out.

"I've interviewed all the victims," Prager told her. "There's never been an instance where Trump was on a plane with these kids and the rapes occurred. But that can't be said for Clinton. And it can't be said for others. While the Clintons were on the plane, while Bill Clinton was on the plane, there were rapes that occurred."

He also claimed Epstein was a CIA informant and that the DOJ shielded him because of his intelligence value.

Check it out:

Flight logs have long confirmed Clinton took 26 trips on Epstein's jet, frequently without Secret Service. Trump flew on Epstein's plane once, in 1997, and later banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago entirely after rumors of misconduct.

When confronted after the footage dropped, Prager hung up on O'Keefe. He later issued a statement claiming the conversation was casual banter based on media reports, that he had no idea he was being recorded, and that his remarks "should not be interpreted as accurate."

The DOJ backed that up, calling Prager a former junior program analyst with no access to the current investigation and his statements "disgusting" exploitation of victims.

So here is where America stands. A man with a documented federal career made explosive on-camera claims to a woman he thought was his date. The DOJ called him a liar. He called himself unreliable.

The tape is out. Clinton's flight logs are real. And the Epstein files are still not fully released.

Draw your own conclusions.