LOTS OF POSTS IGNORED BY BLOGGER.....
ALL POSTS ARE AVAILABLE ON
MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON
INTERNATIONAL CHILD SEX TRAFFICKING ORGANIZATION STILL CONCEALED
BY TRUMP'S DOJ!
Epstein Files “Release” Breaks the Law and is a Total Sham
The Justice Department’s heavily redacted Epstein release defied the law, retraumatized survivors, and again exposed a system designed to protect the powerful rather than the truth.
When the Trump administration promised compliance with the Epstein Transparency Act, the American public was told to expect sunlight. This is why I’ve repeatedly warned listeners of the MeidasTouch Podcast to not get their hopes up. I knew they’d release something to try to satiate the public’s demand for the files. To pretend that they were abiding by the law. I had a feeling they’d heavily redact most of the information under false pretenses, and then try to redirect attention towards other individuals, like Bill Clinton. I knew they’d do their best to hide any references to Donald Trump. And that’s exactly what happened.
I’m no clairvoyant. This was an easy prediction. It’s just what criminal regimes do.
What we got today was darkness by design, quite literally, with thousands of pages shrouded behind with large, black redactions. The Justice Department’s so-called release of Epstein files was not a good-faith effort to meet the law’s requirements. It was a calculated exercise in obstruction that clearly violated the statute, undermined congressional authority, and inflicted fresh harm on survivors of one of the most notorious child sex trafficking operations in modern history.
Let me be clear: this was not even an attempt make the cover up of the Epstein files look believable. This was somehow worse than the worst possible expectations for what Trump was going to produce as the deadline arrived to release them.
The Act is not ambiguous. It requires the Department of Justice to release all unclassified Epstein-related records in its possession by a specific date, and to do so in a searchable format. Not phases. Not samplers. Not a heavily redacted performance meant to create the illusion of transparency. Yet when the DOJ unveiled its “Epstein Library,” the first words attached to the release were “First phase.” That phrase alone signaled noncompliance. Congress did not authorize a first phase. It mandated completion. Not some of the files. All of them.
What followed only confirmed the bad faith. The materials posted amounted to a fraction of what the DOJ has already admitted it possesses. Large portions were not merely redacted but rendered unreadable in their entirety: 119 pages of grand jury material blacked out from top to bottom, despite a federal judge ordering its release; dozens more documents similarly erased; court filings stripped of substance. Even where documents were technically included, many had already been public for years, recycled to pad page counts without adding disclosure.
The searchable database required by law did not function. Searches for obvious terms, like “Epstein,” returned no results. Anyone who has worked in litigation knows that producing large volumes of documents is not an exotic or burdensome task. Optical character recognition has been standard practice for decades. The failure here was intentional.
More troubling still was the standard the DOJ said it applied to redactions. According to the department’s own representations, the same protections used for victims were extended to “politically exposed persons” and wealthy individuals connected to Epstein. In other words, the powerful men who associated with, enabled, or potentially participated in Epstein’s crimes were treated as victims deserving anonymity. That inversion of justice echoes a familiar argument advanced by House Republican leadership when the law was debated: that transparency would unfairly harm the reputations of influential men. Remember when Speaker Johnson said that out loud? Congress rejected that premise. The DOJ resurrected it anyway.
The selectivity of the release made the motive unmistakable. Photographs of former President Bill Clinton with Epstein were prominently displayed, while references to others were aggressively obscured. Yet even this effort was imperfect. Incompetence or haste allowed several items involving Donald Trump to slip through the cracks: photographs from Epstein’s home that include Trump, and images connected to a $22,500 check bearing Trump’s signature. That amount matches a grotesque reference contained in Epstein’s birthday book, where a longtime Mar-a-Lago associate joked about selling a “fully depreciated” woman to Trump. That birthday book entry itself was not included in the DOJ’s release, despite its relevance and prior disclosure elsewhere.
The release also included a civil lawsuit filed by a Jane Doe describing abuse that began when she was 13 years old. The complaint recounts Epstein bringing her to Mar-a-Lago, where he introduced her to Donald J. Trump when she was 14. According to the filing, Epstein joked about her in Trump’s presence, and Trump responded with a smile and nod. These are sworn allegations, not commentary, and they underscore why full transparency matters. Survivors have already endured the unimaginable. Watching the federal government shield the powerful while erasing the record retraumatizes them all over again.
Members of Congress who authored and enforced the law were unequivocal. Democratic lawmakers, including those who worked alongside Republican sponsors to pass the Act, stated publicly that the DOJ’s production did not comply with statutory requirements or court orders. They noted the absence of required explanations for redactions and the failure to produce draft indictments and other investigative materials known to exist. Some warned that contempt proceedings, impeachment inquiries, or criminal referrals could follow if obstruction continues. Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY) said the Trump administration “grossly” violated the law he helped author along with Representative Ro Khanna (D-CA). “A future DOJ could convict the current AG and others because the Epstein Files Transparency Act is not like a Congressional Subpoena which expires at the end of each Congress,” he added on X. Khanna was blunt: “The DOJ’s document dump of hundreds of thousands of pages failed to comply with the law authored by @RepThomasMassie and me.”
By contrast, other Republican leaders rushed to declare victory. House Oversight Chair James Comer praised the release as exactly what the public wanted, even as he acknowledged that much of it would take days to review and might duplicate prior disclosures. Other Republicans offered vague assurances that anyone implicated should be prosecuted, while ignoring the threshold problem that the evidence necessary to assess culpability was being withheld.
This is not a dispute over interpretation. It is a clear case of executive defiance. Congress passed a law. The president, after mounting pressure, signed it. The Department of Justice ignored it. That is theater. Not “the most transparent administration in history,” as administration officials are claiming today. It is also part of a broader pattern under a president whose personal history intersects uncomfortably with the subject at hand.
The Epstein Transparency Act was meant to restore public trust by exposing how a child sex trafficker operated with impunity for years, protected by wealth, connections, and institutional failure. The DOJ’s response did the opposite. It confirmed the suspicion that when accountability threatens the powerful, the machinery of government can still be bent to protect them.
Watch my latest report on the so-called “release” above. There will be much more to come. Stay tuned…




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