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The Epstein Files are Worse Than You Think!

The congressional order requiring the Department of Justice to release the Epstein files was build as a victory for transparency last month when it was signed into law. Since the files started being released a day laid in small increments and with heavy redactions, it's become a chaotic spectacle of incompetence, technical failure, and selective disclosure, making the most unhinged conspiracy theorists look reasonable. On Christmas Eve, it was announced that additional files had been uncovered and that it would likely take a few more weeks for the full data set to be released. The scale of the emission is staggering.

To date, the Department of Justice has released just 11,034 documents. Yet, with this sudden request for delay, the department admitted that it has uncovered over a million additional records that still need to be reviewed. This admission is a humiliating reversal for Attorney General Pal Bondi, who in February told the public that the relevant files were sitting on her desk and ready for review. This pivot from ready to release to too much to process confirms the worst fears of transparency advocates.

Simple math dictates that if a million documents remain hidden, the public has seen perhaps 1% of the total cash. Rather than the flood of clarity Congress demanded, we've received a muddy trickle, a disparity that critics argue amounts to a deliberate failure to comply with the law. The incompetence was absolute. Ordinary members of the public quickly discovered that some redacted text could be revealed by simply copying and pasting the document into a different format.

These digital slipups exposed not sensitive victim data, but financial records and details that the law explicitly forbade the DOJ from hiding, proving that the censorship was often protecting reputations, not victims. Beyond the political theater, genuine scandals have emerged from the recently released files that contradict the official narrative that we've been fed. For months, administration officials like Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Cash Patel insisted that there was no client list and nothing to see in the files. Patel went further, telling Congress that there's no credible information, none, that Epstein traffked women to others.

The documents prove otherwise. Buried within the release is a revelation that federal agents identified and attempted to contact 10 potential co-conspirators immediately after Epstein's 2019 arrest. While most names remain redacted, the existence of this list confirms that ...

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Watch the full video by Patrick Boyle on YouTube.