jesse watters primetime. tonight this is an attack on diversity. you can hear and see the racism. jesse: democrats defend plagiarism. i didn t see that coming. i ain t say [bleep] about trans people. maybe three or four times a night, but that s it. jesse: dave chappelle, doc on tour, having a ball. $2,000. $3,000. done. holy [bleep]! jesse: that is one sticky honeypot. plus. fox news alert, a huge batch of epstein documents were just released by a judge. a thousand pages naming epstein s fixers, employees, associates, and accusers. our team is digging through them right now and we will have a report for you in a few moments. but first. for as long as there have been words, there have been plagiarists. the first known case of plagiarism came in the first century, when roman poet marshall accused another poet of kidnapping his verses. how dare you kidnap my versus! throughout the years we have seen plagiarism everywhere, from music to politics.
just prosecute them, you end up losing a valuable clearance-holding asset to the united states national security infrastructure. so, oftentimes, the objective here is to find out what information was granted, what information was shared, and fix the problem from the inside and just kind of push away the person who broke the policy rather than seek any kind of legal charges. jesse: and these johns had to disclose their ids before they did the deed? how dumb is that? [laughs] how dumb is that? and these are the people who are supposed to be the elites. one of the things that is interesting about this case specifically, not only that you had very senior people involved, senior lawyers, professors, attorneys, intelligence contract executives like, these are definitely powerful people, and it kind of goes to show that they thought they were in a very