The Vault: The Epstein Files
If the birthday message attributed to Donald Trump was truly forged, the absence of a publicly announced investigation into who created it is difficult to explain. Fabricating evidence to connect a sitting president to Jeffrey Epstein would be an extraordinary act with potentially serious criminal, political, and national-security implications. Investigators could examine the album’s chain of custody, test the paper and ink, compare the signature with authenticated examples, and interview the people who assembled and preserved the birthday book. Instead, Trump and the White House have focused primarily on denouncing the document and suing The Wall Street Journal. That approach attacks the publisher without identifying the alleged forger or establishing how a fraudulent page supposedly entered a private album assembled in 2003. This does not prove that Trump wrote the message, but it creates a legitimate credibility problem for his denial. A defamation lawsuit can impose costs, create delays, intimidate further reporting, and keep the dispute framed around media conduct rather than the document’s authenticity. A real forgery investigation would be harder to control and could either vindicate Trump or produce evidence contradicting him. Given Trump’s documented social relationship with Epstein during the relevant period, the existence of a birthday contribution is not inherently implausible. Until the administration demands an independent forensic examination and explains who supposedly forged the message, the suspicion will remain that the lawsuit was intended less to uncover the truth than to slow the release of damaging information and create enough doubt to protect Trump politically. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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