We have a critical update tonight regarding Jeffrey Epstein—one that makes clear just how much work remains to fully expose the truth. I promised I would not let this story fade, and I am keeping my foot on the gas. The powerful want this buried. They want you distracted. But I won’t stop. I am committed to cutting through the smoke and mirrors and making sure the American people see what really happened.
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This afternoon, I spoke directly with California Congressman Robert Garcia, the Democratic leader on the House Oversight Committee. Garcia, who has reviewed the Epstein files recently delivered to Congress, provided critical insights into what lawmakers have received—and, perhaps more importantly, what they have not.
According to Garcia, the Justice Department turned over more than 33,000 pages of material last Friday in response to a congressional demand for full disclosure by August 19. But of those pages, only about 3 percent contained new information. The remaining 97 percent had already been made public through prior releases from the Justice Department, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, or the Palm Beach County State Attorney’s office.
The documents include:
The only genuinely new records amount to fewer than 1,000 pages—primarily flight location logs from U.S. Customs and Border Protection documenting Epstein’s plane movements between 2000 and 2014, along with re-entry forms when Epstein’s aircraft returned to U.S. soil.
Garcia’s conclusion was blunt: the committee received very little new information, raising concerns that the full truth is still being withheld.
Meanwhile, the release of the Ghislaine Maxwell interview transcript has sparked outrage among survivors and their families. I received a statement this afternoon from the family of Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein’s most prominent survivors.
Their words are damning:
“As the family of one of the most prominent survivors, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, we are outraged. The content of these transcripts is in direct contradiction with felon Ghislaine Maxwell’s conviction for child sex trafficking. During DAG Todd Blanche’s bizarre interview, she is never challenged about her court-proven lies, providing her a platform to rewrite history. This travesty of justice entirely invalidates the experiences of the many brave survivors who put their safety, security, and lives on the line to ensure her conviction, including our sister.”
The family also condemned Maxwell’s transfer to a minimum-security facility, calling it a “country club prison” and warning that it sends a dangerous message—that those who traffic children may ultimately be rewarded with comfort and leniency.
The statement concluded with a direct demand to the Department of Justice:
“The Department of Justice serves the people of the United States. We continue to call upon the DOJ to do its job by investigating and holding accountable the many rich and powerful people who enabled Ghislaine Maxwell’s and Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes.”
This is the heart of the matter. Epstein did not operate in isolation. Survivors and their families, lawmakers, and the public deserve to know who else was involved—and why so many individuals have thus far escaped accountability.
Make no mistake: I am not going to stop pursuing these answers. The Trump administration—and others who benefit from silence—would prefer this reporting vanish into the background. It won’t.
This work is not underwritten by billionaires or backed by massive newsrooms. It’s supported by you. This investigation remains lean, urgent, and relentless. If you value getting past the official spin and learning the truth, consider subscribing to help me continue.
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The Epstein story is about more than one man. It is about power, corruption, and the failure of institutions to protect the most vulnerable. And until justice is fully served, the pressure must not let up.
