BOMBSHELL! Newly discovered internal email reveals that Trump's DOJ was investigating Epstein's "murder" - not a suicide. For years, Americans were told the same story: Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide. Case closed. Move on. But now, a newly unearthed email from inside Donald Trump's own Justice Department is blowing that narrative wide open. Buried in the DOJ's massive release of 3.5 million Epstein-related files is a 2020 email from someone identifying themselves as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York. And in that email, the attorney refers to an "investigation into the murder of Jeffrey Epstein." What? Wait! Not "death." Not "suicide." Murder. The email, sent nearly a year after Epstein's death had officially been ruled a suicide by the New York City medical examiner, references a confidentiality agreement tied to "the investigation into the murder of Jeffrey Epstein." The names of both the sender and recipient are redacted - but the language is crystal clear. This wasn't some random blogger speculating. This was a federal prosecutor inside Trump's Justice Department. The timing is explosive. In mid-2020, Trump was still president. His Justice Department had already publicly accepted the suicide ruling. Yet internally, at least one federal prosecutor was using the word "murder" in connection with an ongoing investigation. And here's where it gets even messier: Just last year, the DOJ released a memo reaffirming that Epstein died by suicide - sparking outrage among many in Trump's base who have long believed something more sinister happened. So, which is it? Was Trump's DOJ investigating a murder in 2020? If so, why? And why does that conflict with the department's later, definitive public conclusion? The contradictions are impossible to ignore. An internal email. A formal suicide ruling. A later memo doubling down. If nothing else, this revelation shatters the tidy narrative that the matter was fully settled. Because when a federal prosecutor writes "murder" in black and white - long after the official ruling - that's not a typo. That's a question mark the American people deserve to have answered.