Rep. Anna Paulina Luna ripped into the Epstein files on Fox’s Will Cain Show, calling Jeffrey Epstein a “master manipulator” and warning that the trail points beyond mere criminal depravity into the murky world of foreign intelligence. Her blunt assessment—that Epstein may have been used as an asset by foreign powers—should alarm every patriot who believes our national security and the rule of law come first.
Luna is not just yelling into the void; she leads the House Oversight task force on declassification and has sat with survivors who say the scale of this operation was international and organized. After closed-door meetings, she stated there were countries named in victims’ testimony and that thousands of DOJ emails and documents are being examined for connections and money trails that point to a well-orchestrated network.
Congressional Republicans followed up by releasing a massive batch of more than 33,000 pages from the Epstein probe—proof that pressure can force previously hidden material into daylight. Critics waved their hands and complained that most of it was “already public,” but the release included items like surveillance footage fragments and flight logs that raise real, unanswered questions about who knew what and when.
Let’s be clear: the real scandal isn’t that some documents were duplicates; the scandal is the appearance of a cover-up and a deep-state culture that protects the elite while victims suffer. Conservatives have long warned that bureaucracies become self-protecting machines; when those machines touch intelligence services and federal prosecutors, transparency isn’t optional—it’s a duty to the American people.
Luna’s insistence on following the money and pushing for criminal referrals is exactly the kind of no-nonsense oversight Americans deserve. If Epstein really functioned as an asset, whether knowingly or because agencies tolerated him for access, then those who enabled or ignored such monstrous behavior must be exposed and held accountable.
Predictably, the left-wing media and establishment figures are trying to pivot to victim privacy and minutiae to dampen the public’s anger, but privacy arguments should not become a shield for the powerful. Survivors deserve justice, and the public deserves to know if intelligence, foreign governments, or corrupt officials traded national security and human lives for influence and silence.
Americans who love this country must stand with leaders who demand answers, not with a system that rushes to protect itself. Rep. Luna is putting her neck on the line—facing threats and scorn—to pry open a case that smells of kompromat and cover-up; patriots should applaud, pressure Congress to finish the job, and insist on prosecutions where the evidence leads.
