'Huh?' Legal experts stunned after Bill Barr decides not to recuse himself from current Jeffrey Epstein case
AG William Barr testifies before Congress. (Image via AFP/Nicholas Kamm.)

U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr does not plan to recuse himself from the current investigation into multi-millionaire and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, according to sources who spoke to CNN and Fox News.


A Department of Justice official told CNN on Tuesday that "Bill Barr has consulted with career ethics officials at DOJ and he will not recuse from current Epstein case."

Barr, however, has recused himself "from any review of the earlier case in Florida," in which Epstein received a controversial plea deal.

On Monday, Barr was quoted as saying: "I'm recused from that matter because one of the law firms that represented Epstein long ago was a firm I subsequently joined for a period of time."

CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said Barr's decision not to recuse himself from the current case was "trouble."

"I have zero confidence Barr will let this case play out in its natural course if it should start to implicate or do collateral damage to powerful, politically-connected people," he tweeted.

Other legal experts were surprised by Barr's decision as well.

But Walter Shaub Jr., the former the head of the federal Office of Government Ethics, said that it was not necessary for Barr to recuse himself from the current case.