On December 15, 2025, Gervonta “Tank” Davis’ fists clenched tight, his champion’s calm shattering as he stared down Attorney General Pam Bondi on CNN’s prime-time panel hosted by Kaitlan Collins: “If you were a man, I’d show you the power of boxing—not with punches, but with the truth you’re too scared to face.”

The undefeated lightweight king, invited to discuss his upcoming title defense, pivoted the conversation to the Epstein files controversy when Bondi defended redactions in the December 12 photo release. “You keep saying ‘protect victims,’” Davis said, voice low but edged with fury, leaning forward. “But Virginia Giuffre fought alone—named princes, billionaires, predators—and they broke her until she took her life April 25. Her book Nobody’s Girl is right here.” He slammed the memoir on the table. “Read it, Pam. Every page knocks out your excuses.”
Bondi, visibly rattled, replied, “Mr. Davis, this is a legal process—” but Davis cut in: “Legal process let Epstein walk in 2008 under your watch in Florida. If you were a man, I’d show you the power of boxing—not with punches, but with the truth you’re too scared to face.” The studio froze; Collins audibly inhaled. Davis continued: “December 19 is coming. Release it all—or admit you’re protecting the ring, not the fighters.”
The clip exploded, amassing 22 million views in 24 hours, trending #TankVsBondi with 4.8 million posts (79% supporting Davis). Bondi called it “intimidation”; survivors hailed it as “a knockout for Virginia.” Davis later posted the book on Instagram: “Truth hits harder than any hook.”
As the Transparency Act’s deadline loomed, Davis’ ring-honed defiance turned a political panel into a title fight—for justice.
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