Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles
The DOJ’s Epstein files rollout became a political and legal disaster for Pam Bondi because it managed to anger almost everyone at once: survivors, transparency advocates, Democrats, Republicans, and even parts of Trump’s own base. The department had promised transparency, but the releases were criticized as incomplete, over-redacted, glitchy, and in some cases reckless, including acknowledged “redaction errors” that exposed sensitive victim information. Bondi publicly defended the process, but she also admitted she had delegated the Epstein files release to her deputy, Todd Blanche, saying he was in charge of the “entire release” and the redaction protocols. That left Bondi politically exposed as the face of the failed rollout while also making Blanche central to the very process he would later inherit. Bondi was eventually ousted by Trump, with reporting tying her firing in part to the Epstein files mess and the administration’s broader failure to satisfy demands for disclosure. Blanche, who had been deputy attorney general, became acting attorney general after her removal, and Trump later moved to nominate him permanently, even though Bondi’s own testimony made clear that he had been deeply involved in the Epstein release from the beginning. That creates a brutal irony: the scandal that helped end Bondi’s tenure did not remove the DOJ’s Epstein problem; it simply shifted it to Blanche, the official she said oversaw the process. Now, with Judge Emmet Sullivan ordering the DOJ to produce less-redacted Epstein records or justify its secrecy by July 2, Blanche is not just Bondi’s replacement — he is the person left holding the bag for the same disclosure fight that helped bring her down. to contact me: bobbycapucc@protonmail.com
998 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles!