BREAKING: Republican Comer: “The Federal Government Asked New Mexico to Stop”
New Mexico was told to back off in 2019. The real question is what the feds did next.
TLDR
New Mexico’s DOJ says its earlier investigation into alleged illegal activity at Epstein’s ranch was closed in 2019 at the request of SDNY federal prosecutors. [1]
A state search of the property began March 9, 2026, as part of the reopened criminal investigation, with state police and local support, according to the state’s own statement. [2]
The “buried bodies” claim driving some of the current public heat traces to a redacted, anonymous 2019 emailsent after Epstein’s death that offered alleged videos and claimed two “foreign girls” were buried near the ranch. The state says it is investigating. Publicly available reporting says the allegation is unverified. [4][3]
Rep. Comer says the federal government told New Mexico to stop in 2019, and he suggests SDNY may have taken over. That aligns with what New Mexico’s DOJ now states in writing about SDNY’s role in shutting the prior probe down. [6][1]
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As of 10:15 PM ET on March 11, 2026, one verified fact sits at the center of the newest wave of attention around Epstein’s New Mexico property: state officials say their 2019 investigation into alleged illegal activity linked to the ranch was closed at the request of federal prosecutors in New York, specifically the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. [1]
That request happened under Trump’s Department of Justice. And now, as state investigators return to the property amid resurfaced claims including an unsubstantiated “buried bodies” allegation, Rep. Comer is publicly pointing back to that 2019 federal stand-down as a key failure point. On Fox, he put it bluntly: “It was the Department of Justice, I believe.” [6][3]
Why This Matters
There are two separate issues here, and the public keeps getting pushed to mash them into one.
One issue is the unverified “buried bodies” allegation, which is exactly the kind of claim that can become a propaganda tool: either to panic the public into conspiracy, or to discredit survivors by flooding the zone with the most extreme thing in the file. Responsible reporting treats it as what it currently is: an allegation contained in a document release, under active state review, not a confirmed fact. [3][5][4]
The other issue is the one that does have a clean paper trail: in 2019, federal prosecutors asked New Mexico to stop. New Mexico’s DOJ is explicit that SDNY requested the state close its prior investigation. That is a jurisdictional intervention, and it is the kind of move that can be justified in legitimate “deconfliction” terms, but it also carries a burden: if the feds tell the state to stand down, the public deserves to know what the feds did instead. [1][12]
As a retired police officer, I’m looking at this through a very plain, very old-school lens: when one agency tells another to back off, the only ethical version of that decision is the one where the lead agency actually follows through with meaningful investigative action and documented outcomes.
What We Know Tonight
New Mexico reopened its criminal investigation of alleged illegal activity tied to Epstein’s ranch after reviewing information released in the recent federal “Epstein files” disclosures, and the state says it wants immediate access to the complete, unredacted federal case file. [1][5]
The state has also made the 2019 stand-down request unusually explicit. In its February 19, 2026 statement, New Mexico’s DOJ says the prior state investigation “was closed in 2019 at the request of” SDNY, and that the newer “revelations” now justify reopening. [1]
On March 9, 2026, New Mexico’s DOJ announced it initiated a search of the property, with state police and local support, including a K-9 team referenced in the state’s statement, and it urged the public to stay away to avoid interfering with the operation. [2]
The “buried bodies” narrative that has surged online and in commentary has a specific origin in published reporting: a redacted email sent in 2019 to Eddy Aragon, a local talk-radio host, claiming that two “foreign girls” were buried near the ranch and offering alleged videos in exchange for one bitcoin. Reuters reports that Aragon said he forwarded it to the FBI, and that a later FBI report referenced the visit where he reported the email. [4]
ABC News reports that the released materials contained no corroborating evidence beyond the initial email allegation, and that state interest was fueled in part by a request from Stephanie Garcia Richard to investigate the claim. ABC also reports that the state’s 2019 probe was paused at the request of the U.S. DOJ. [3]
The most important thing to keep straight is what is confirmed versus what is asserted.
Confirmed: New Mexico says SDNY asked the state to close its 2019 investigation. [1]
Confirmed: New Mexico says it has reopened the case and is actively searching the property. [2][1]
Not confirmed publicly: that any bodies exist, that any burial occurred, or that law enforcement has validated the anonymous email’s claims. [4][3]
Image block from the research output: Zorro Ranch aerial view, investigators searching the ranch, and ranch entrance view.
Timeline and Coverage Treatment
The pattern is not “silence.” The pattern is compression: the 2019 federal request appears as a line or two in wire-style coverage, while the deeper accountability question, what exactly SDNY did after the state stepped back, often gets treated as implied rather than investigated. [11][7][9]
What Remains Unanswered
If the “breaking” hook is “the feds told New Mexico to stop,” the core unresolved questions are not rhetorical. They are operational.
What exactly did SDNY request in 2019: a pause, a full handoff of investigative materials, or a shut down with an expectation of federal search warrants and interviews to follow? New Mexico’s statement establishes the request happened, but does not disclose the request’s scope or terms. [1]
What investigative steps did federal authorities take afterward, specifically regarding the ranch? New Mexico’s renewed action is happening now, which implicitly re-raises why a physical search is only taking place years later. Press reporting has repeatedly noted that the ranch did not appear to be searched during the 2019 era scrutiny of other properties. [3][10]
And on the most explosive allegation, what do investigators now consider credible: was the anonymous “buried bodies” email treated as a hoax, an extortion attempt, an unverifiable rumor, or a lead that needed field work? Public reporting to date emphasizes the lack of corroboration disclosed in the file materials. [3][4][5]
The Real Question
Rep. Comer’s comments matter less as commentary and more as an accidental spotlight: he is pointing at the same basic accountability rule every street-level investigator learns early. If you tell another agency to stand down, you own the outcome. [6][1]
The question “Why did Trump’s DOJ do this?” has one publicly documented, institutionally normal answer: to avoid a parallel investigation while federal prosecutors ran a multi-jurisdictional case. That rationale is described in reporting about 2019 coordination. [12][1]
But the deeper question, the one that won’t go away, is this: did the stand-down produce a stronger investigation, or did it create a dead zone where nobody did the hard work? If the state closed at SDNY’s request, and the ranch still went unsearched while time erased evidence, then the decision stops looking like coordination and starts looking like abandonment, regardless of intent. [1][10]
In psychological terms, this is how institutions build a shadow. Not by one dramatic cover-up, but by a chain of small, plausible decisions that add up to collective avoidance. And what the public feels as “they’re hiding something” is sometimes just the psychic recognition of that avoidance pattern playing out in real time.
Before This Becomes Normal
If this turns your stomach the way it should, do not let this story get swallowed by spectacle, gossip, and the next shiny outrage. The point is not the lurid rumor. The point is that powerful people told investigators to stop, and then years disappeared.
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Sources
Statement from the New Mexico Department of Justice Regarding Zorro Ranch - New Mexico DOJ statement reopening the investigation and naming SDNY’s 2019 request to close the prior state probe.
Statement from New Mexico Department of Justice Spokesperson Regarding Today’s Search of the Former Zorro Ranch - New Mexico DOJ statement announcing the March 9 search operation and urging the public not to interfere.
Why are authorities finally searching Epstein’s ranch in New Mexico? - ABC News explainer detailing that investigators appear not to have searched the ranch in 2019, that the state probe was paused at DOJ request, and that the “buried bodies” claim is uncorroborated in disclosed materials.
New Mexico probes allegation of bodies buried near Epstein ranch - Reuters report on the anonymous 2019 email, the bitcoin demand, the alleged videos, and the alleged burial claim, along with the state’s investigation into the allegation.
Department of Justice Publishes 3.5 Million Responsive Pages in Compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act - DOJ Office of Public Affairs release describing the January 30, 2026 publication of about 3.5 million pages and warning the production may include false public submissions and sensational claims.
MAGA lawmaker claims Trump admin halted previous search of Epstein’s Zorro Ranch - The Independent report on Comer’s remarks and his suggestion that DOJ and possibly SDNY told New Mexico to stop investigating in 2019.
New Mexico authorities conduct search of Zorro Ranch formerly owned by Epstein - Republished CNN-style reporting summarizing the reopened search, the 2019 stand-down reference, and the unverified email allegation’s role in renewed scrutiny.
New Mexico DOJ announces search of former Jeffrey Epstein property Zorro Ranch - Fox News coverage focusing on the official announcement of the search and the reopened probe.
New Mexico authorities launch search of ranch previously owned by Epstein - Guardian coverage of the search that frames the renewed action as a major shift and notes the earlier lack of scrutiny.
Investigators are finally looking into Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch. They may be too late - Guardian analysis explaining why the ranch may have gone unsearched for too long and why time may have eroded evidence.
New Mexico prosecutors launch search of Jeffrey Epstein’s secluded former Zorro Ranch - Washington Post and AP style coverage noting the 2019 closure at federal request and the current search, as an example of compression framing.
New Mexico approves truth commission on alleged Jeffrey Epstein ranch abuse - Guardian report providing context on the broader effort to investigate the ranch and former AG Hector Balderas’s description of the earlier federal request.






Clara Bates, a reporter for the Santa Fe New Mexican, through a persistent series of IPRA (state Inspection of Public Records Act) requests, discovered the new owners of Zorro Ranch are the Huffines family of TX. They bought the ranch through an LLC that did not indicate its ownership. Don Huffines, a MAGA billionaire, just won the Republican primary for state Comptroller with a "DOGE TEXAS" slogan.
Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez, an independent local journalist whose Substack is titled "Alisa Writes" has done a lot of work on Zorro and the Huffines family.
Somewhere in a recent New Mexican article I read that AG Balderas, who the feds told to drop the Zorro investigation, also turned over everything he had on it.
Thank you for this reporting. The more people looking at this the harder it will be to make it disappear again.
Your clarity and attention to what is and isn't factually known at this point are a godsend. There are days I can barely make myself look at the newest headlines, but your work I always seek out.