Musk continued his online campaign against the Trump administration on Monday, posting on X about the lack of arrests related to Jeffrey Epstein's supposed "client list" despite campaign promises to release information about his close associates.
"What's the time? Oh look, it's no-one-has-been-arrested-o'clock again," he captioned a graphic titled "The Official Jeffrey Epstein Arrest Counter" set to "0000."
What’s the time? Oh look, it’s no-one-has-been-arrested-o’clock again … pic.twitter.com/CO9xJz68Tf
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 7, 2025
Musk was seemingly responding to an earlier post in which the Trump administration said "There is no Epstein list" after promising to release it.
The Epstein knock has been ongoing with Musk, who during an earlier disagreement with President Donald Trump accused him of being on the Epstein list before removing the post and apologizing.
Musk obviously doesn't know who is on the Epstein list, if it exists, or he would probably just release the information himself.
That's if there is even an Epstein list, which would mean that the Trump administration was lying when it claimed there wasn't one.
At any rate, the administration also signaled that there were no further arrests forthcoming related to Epstein's alleged sex trafficking.
Epstein and his associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, were both arrested in connection to sex trafficking, and many allegations were thrown around about which famous and high-profile politicians and celebrities might have been involved.
Epstein was said to have had a top-secret client list that he used to blackmail his famous clientele, but a Sunday night memo from the DOJ said they didn't find any evidence of a list or any sort of blackmail.
The memo, as reported by Axios, also said there was no evidence Epstein didn't kill himself, despite widespread questions and speculation suggesting he was murdered by someone who didn't want his alleged client list to be made public.
FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, who once espoused conspiracy theories about how Epstein really died, said in April that after investigating himself, he believes that Epstein did kill himself.
He and FBI Director Kash Patel, who said before his appointment that it should be easy to release the Epstein client list and implied that officials were cowards for not doing it, that Epstein's cause of death was suicide and that the client list didn't exist.
Many people remain skeptical about that narrative, however.