The Vault: The Epstein Files
The DOJ, under Todd Blanche and Donald Trump, is once again accused of treating an Epstein-related court order as optional, this time in connection with Judge Emmet Sullivan’s order in Katie Phang’s lawsuit seeking Epstein-related documents from the government. Sullivan made clear that DOJ needed to produce less-redacted material or justify the continued withholding, but instead of straightforward compliance, the department has leaned into delay, resistance, and procedural maneuvering. The central criticism is that this is not an isolated paperwork dispute, but another example of the DOJ’s long-running pattern in the Epstein matter: hiding behind redactions, process, victim-protection language, and vague claims of sensitivity while refusing to provide the public with the full accounting Congress, the courts, survivors, and citizens have demanded. The broader point is that the Epstein case has become a test of whether powerful institutions are actually bound by the law they enforce on everyone else. If a regular citizen ignored a court order, consequences would come quickly, but when DOJ slow-walks or resists disclosure, it is treated as a legal disagreement rather than defiance. The essay argues that Judge Sullivan, Congress, the courts, and the OIG must stop accepting excuses and start imposing real consequences, whether through contempt, sanctions, sworn explanations, redaction logs, subpoenas, or independent review. Until someone with authority finally steps up and forces compliance, the DOJ will continue to manage the Epstein narrative, protect institutional reputations, and deny survivors and the public the transparency they were promised. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
997 jaksot
Kommentit
0Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija
Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Vault: The Epstein Files-yhteisöön!