Calm. Methodical. Evidence-Based.

A new Epstein survivor account is paired with a political transparency fight that still leaves major DOJ files unreleased and survivors worried about both secrecy and privacy failures.

Executive

Mar 26, 2026

A walkout over Pam Bondi’s Epstein-files briefing is really a fight over whether the Justice Department will answer Congress under oath about a legally mandated disclosure it botched.

Congress

Mar 19, 2026

A commentary piece argues “America First” influencers and some officials are breaking with Trump over Iran and Epstein.

Iran War

Mar 17, 2026

A poll-backed conspiracy frame: voters suspect Iran strikes were an “Epstein files” distraction.

Iran War

Mar 17, 2026

Approving a convicted Epstein accomplice’s transfer to a low-security camp while DOJ records become street-level pressure near the White House fractures anti-corruption accountability norms.

Media & Narrative

Mar 2, 2026

A closed-door House deposition surfaced conflicting accounts about an Epstein-estate settlement tied to accusations involving a sitting president, forcing public judgment through leaks instead of open evidentiary process.

Congress

Mar 11, 2026

Closed-door congressional testimony confirmed an Epstein-estate payout to a Trump accuser, delaying public scrutiny while allegations involving a sitting president remain in limbo.

Congress

Mar 11, 2026

Withholding and removing federal Epstein-file materials that mention a sitting president normalizes executive control over disclosure and erodes the Justice Department’s baseline duty of transparent, even-handed record handling.

Executive

Mar 10, 2026

Federal archive releases are colliding with White House denial, forcing our institutions to choose between transparency and reflexive dismissal when serious allegations reach the public record.

Executive

Mar 9, 2026

The Justice Department withheld and then released Epstein-related FBI memos under “duplicate” and “privilege” coding, normalizing discretionary transparency in politically explosive matters.

Executive

Mar 9, 2026

Justice Department–released emails map how a convicted sex offender functioned as a quiet broker linking U.S. defense-adjacent tech capital to foreign security power, outside public accountability.

General

The White House is treating federal prosecutors’ inaction and selective file releases as blanket exoneration, turning executive messaging into a substitute for independent accountability.

Executive

Mar 8, 2026

Congress is using subpoena power to force the nation’s top law enforcement official to account for how DOJ controlled and disclosed sensitive investigative records under mounting bipartisan distrust.

Congress

The DOJ’s selective posting—after previously removing the same interviews—sets a precedent for discretionary federal disclosure that can be shaped around a sitting president.

Executive

Mar 6, 2026

A Justice Department “coding” error kept FBI 302s out of public view, and our disclosure systems now set precedent for political fallout from what gets withheld—and why.

Executive

Mar 6, 2026