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DOJ Under Fire for Epstein File Fail: Justice or Cover-Up?

Wednesday’s House Judiciary hearing made one thing painfully clear to every patriotic American paying attention: Attorney General Pam Bondi was grilled about the Epstein file releases, and the country is still waiting for real answers. Bondi defended the Justice Department’s handling of the documents while facing sharp criticism from Democrats and survivors who say the release has been mishandled and incomplete.

Congress was told the department had identified roughly 6 million potentially responsive pages but has only released about half that amount, leaving a yawning gap that smells like politics, not justice. Lawmakers and victims rightly demand to know where the rest of the files are, why so many pages remain undisclosed, and who decided certain material was “non-responsive.”

Even more infuriating for conservatives who believe in law and order: the redaction choices by the DOJ appear upside down — names of alleged perpetrators obscured while some victims’ identities were exposed, a grotesque inversion of basic decency and legal protections. That kind of incompetence or intentional shielding cannot stand; victims deserve privacy and perpetrators deserve prosecution.

Democratic members thundered about a cover-up and demanded apologies, while Bondi refused to play the role of political confession; she pushed back, calling many of the theatrics exactly that. Regardless of partisan barbs, neither side should be able to hide behind procedural excuses while Americans seek the truth about a monstrous criminal enterprise.

And where, taxpayer, are the arrests? Despite millions of pages, survivors and lawmakers keep pointing out that “none of the perpetrators have been brought to justice” from the public releases to date — a blank space where accountability should be. If our justice system can marshal resources to pursue political rivals but not to hunt down the enablers of human trafficking, then something has gone rotten in Washington.

On conservative airwaves, Newsmax’s Carl Higbie and others rightly called out the glaring discrepancy between talk and consequence, demanding prosecutions not press conferences. Higbie’s program has made Epstein a recurring focus, pressing for transparency and for the DOJ to stop playing politics with evidence and victims’ lives.

Patriots know the remedy: real oversight, not kabuki theater; indictments where the evidence supports them; and a DOJ that serves victims, not political narratives. If Republican officials mean what they say about restoring faith in institutions, they should stop the spin, follow the documents, and bring the guilty to justice — anything less is a betrayal of every hardworking American who still believes in equal justice under the law.

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