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Norms Impact

Trump Humiliated as Epstein ‘Walk of Shame’ Pops Up Near White House

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

Sources

Summary

A set of “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame” stickers naming public figures with alleged links to Jeffrey Epstein appeared around Farragut Square, a short walk from the White House. The Trump administration previously approved moving Ghislaine Maxwell from prison to a low-security camp in Texas. The stickers’ QR codes route passersby to Department of Justice materials and other linking information, turning federal records into a public accountability tactic in the nation’s executive capital.

Reality Check

When an administration approves special treatment for a convicted sex trafficker tied to a case with sweeping elite exposure, we weaken the baseline expectation of equal application of punishment and custody decisions.
That precedent conditions the public to accept discretionary outcomes for the connected, even as federal documents are repurposed into informal accountability campaigns outside the seat of executive power. Over time, selective leniency corrodes faith in the Justice Department’s independence and turns rule-of-law legitimacy into a contest of access and influence.

Media

Detail

<p>Stickers labeled “Jeffrey Epstein Walk of Shame,” styled to resemble Hollywood Walk of Fame stars with Epstein’s face as the emblem, were photographed Sunday by Getty in and around Farragut Square in Washington, D.C., about five minutes from the White House.</p><p>The stickers include QR codes that, when scanned, open Department of Justice webpages or other information tying the named person to Epstein, as described by MS Now. Individuals shown on the stickers include Ghislaine Maxwell, Elon Musk, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Les Wexner, Prince Andrew, Larry Summers, Steve Jobs, and former President Bill Clinton.</p><p>The context referenced in the QR-linked materials includes a 2012 email exchange between Epstein and Musk, emails between Epstein and Lutnick after Epstein’s 2008 guilty plea for soliciting a minor, and statements from Wexner to the House Oversight Committee, which subpoenaed him as part of an investigation into the government’s handling of the Epstein case. Maxwell is described on a sticker as a “child sex trafficker,” and the text notes she was moved in August of the prior year to a low-security prison camp in Texas with approval of the Trump administration.</p>