FBI Director Kash Patel’s recent interview with Joe Rogan is stirring even more outrage and confusion surrounding the Trump administration’s evolving narrative about the long-suspected “Epstein client list.” In the interview, Rogan directly challenged Patel over his prior promises to release Epstein-related documents — only to be met with deflection and denial.

“We’re going to give you everything we can,” Patel had told Rogan in June, referencing growing public pressure to unveil details about convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s connections to the powerful and well-connected. But when pressed by Rogan again this week — especially in light of Elon Musk’s explosive claim that Trump himself appears in the Epstein files — Patel dodged.

“How does [Musk] know that Donald Trump’s in the Epstein files?” Rogan asked.

Patel responded, “That’s way outside my lane,” despite being the head of the FBI.

The comment sparked immediate backlash from MAGA circles and mainstream commentators alike, as the Department of Justice and FBI simultaneously issued a new statement declaring there is no Epstein client list and reaffirming Epstein’s death as a suicide. The announcement has enraged parts of Trump’s base, many of whom have long believed in a vast, elite pedophilia cover-up — a narrative that Trump himself had once suggested he would expose.

The dissonance isn’t just causing uproar among grassroots conservatives — it’s becoming a flashpoint across political lines. On The View, co-host and former federal prosecutor Sunny Hostin slammed the administration’s backtracking and questioned the integrity of key figures involved.

“Something just seems amiss,” Hostin said. “Will this erode society’s trust in the U.S. government? I think that trust is gone already. That ship has sailed.”

Hostin called out Attorney General Pam Bondi specifically for stating in a February interview that she had “the list” sitting on her desk — not merely files or vague documents, but a specific client list. That statement, which had reignited belief among MAGA supporters that explosive revelations were imminent, has now been walked back by the White House.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt attempted to reframe Bondi’s comments this week, claiming that the AG had “meant” all the Epstein files were on her desk — not an actual list. But Hostin wasn’t buying it.

“She said ‘the list,’” Hostin emphasized. “If I can’t take the attorney general at her word — I can’t take the president at his word because he’s lied over 30-something-thousand times.”

Hostin saved her harshest rebuke for Kash Patel.

“Kash Patel was on Joe Rogan being interviewed, and when Joe Rogan asked about the list, he said, ‘Oh, that’s not my lane.’ Dude, you are the head of the FBI! It’s perfectly within your lane. You’re driving the car!” she said, visibly exasperated.

The broader public confusion isn’t likely to fade soon. The Epstein scandal — long clouded by conspiracy theories, high-profile denials, and a slow drip of revelations — has once again taken center stage, not just for what it may reveal about the rich and powerful, but for what it’s exposing about the fractures within the Trump administration and its supporters.

For now, MAGA loyalists, media personalities, and even former allies like Elon Musk and Roseanne Barr are openly questioning the president’s handling of the issue. With mounting pressure and growing distrust, the administration may find that dismissing the Epstein files is not just politically risky — it may be a line from which many of their supporters won’t come back.