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BREAKING: Supreme Court Set to Withdraw President Donald Trump’s Immunity, Opening the Door for Him to Stand Trial Following Explosive Epstein Revelations and the Controversial Illegal Demolition of the White House East Wing after massive protest in front of White House calling for his impeachment
BREAKING: Supreme Court Set to Withdraw President Donald Trump’s Immunity, Opening the Door for Him to Stand Trial Following Explosive Epstein Revelations and the Controversial Illegal Demolition of the White House East Wing after massive protest in front of White House calling for his impeachment
**Supreme Court Immunity Debate Intensifies Amid Epstein File Releases and Public Outrage**
*February 10, 2026 — Washington, D.C.*
The U.S. Supreme Court remains at the center of a fierce national debate about presidential accountability following its 2024 ruling on former President Donald Trump’s legal immunity — a decision that continues to shape litigation and public sentiment as millions of pages of documents linked to Jeffrey Epstein’s network have been made public.
In *Trump v. United States* (2024), the Court held that former presidents are entitled to **broad immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts** taken while in office, while making clear that unofficial acts are not covered. The ruling sent key criminal cases back to lower courts to parse which actions might qualify for immunity and which do not.
That decision has slowed high‑profile prosecutions tied to Trump, particularly efforts to hold him accountable for actions related to the 2020 election subversion case. Lower courts are still sorting through how to apply the Supreme Court’s framework as they assess whether prosecutors can proceed.
The ongoing **release of Epstein‑related files** — mandated under the *Epstein Files Transparency Act* signed into law in late 2025 — has added pressure on lawmakers and the public to scrutinize powerful figures named in the documents. The law required the attorney general to make unclassified records about the Epstein investigation publicly available and deliver an unredacted list of government officials named in the files to Congress. ([Wikipedia][3])
Although some of the files have fueled speculation — and in some cases conspiracy theories — about connections between Trump and Epstein’s associates, there has been **no verified legal finding** that the Supreme Court is withdrawing Trump’s immunity. Recent reporting shows courts are still navigating the impact of the immunity ruling on various cases.
Meanwhile, demonstrations and protests have taken place in Washington and across the country, with activists demanding greater transparency about the Epstein files and calling for impeachment or other accountability measures. A notable wave of organized protests in 2025, often under banners like “Hands Off” and other civic movements, reflected broader dissatisfaction with the Trump administration’s policies and what critics view as insufficient oversight of powerful figures.
Legal scholars and political commentators say the Supreme Court’s immunity framework will continue to shape high‑stakes litigation into 2026 — potentially affecting how and whether Trump or other officials can face trial on certain charges once all litigation and appeals are resolved.