Hidden in Plain Sight: What We’re Still Overlooking in the Epstein Files
Trigger Warning: This content contains discussions of sexual abuse, exploitation of minors/children, human trafficking, rape, and associated trauma.

I started researching Jeffrey Epstein & Co. when I first learned about him in the early aughts. I can’t remember exactly how I first came across his case(s), but the facts and rumors swirling across all corners of the internet during that era made it impossible not to wonder, “What the fuck?”
Sex trafficking children? Dining with celebs in NYC? Hanging out with the King of Pop? Having meetings with presidents, princes, sheiks, sultans, and dukes? Well, just who was this mysterious, dashing trafficker (that’s complete sarcasm and anger) that so many publications seemed to glamorize, despite knowing he was a convicted sexual predator and pedophile? I just had to know.

There’s still so much left to unearth.
These files are not just exposing democratic or republican pedophiles and predators.
I don’t believe that what exists in them is exclusive only to sex trafficking, politics, or politicians.
What I do know, is that not everyone implicated is blessed with the gift of “absolute”, presidential, whatever-the-fuck, immunity.
In other words, there’s more than one Pandora’s Box of horrors, and I think we absolutely do have the power to make some good trouble—if we dare to look inside.
I encourage you, if you can, to take a look yourself:
Epstein Library: justice.gov version
I know sometimes we need to see things with our own eyes to believe them, or for hard realities to sink in.
The information overload and AI-driven distractions aren’t going to stop. It’s going to become harder to decipher between what’s real and what’s fake as rumors swirl and people just take each other’s word on what’s actually in there when we all have the files at our fingertips.
We can connect these dots together.
We all have our own questions—start there: type in keywords and see what comes up. Maybe it’ll lead you to another “clue,” and then another “clue”—you might find yourself sliding down the rabbit hole, too.
— These files run deeper than just purchasing children from catalogs + menus, or eating at fine-dining restaurants that specialize in serving the most exquisite cheese pizza, jerky, and chicken parmesan for the rich.

— They go deeper than just creating corporate entities, NGOs, or front organizations in places like Haiti—disguised as charitable efforts “for the children.”

— Deeper than financial ties or national security interests.


— Deeper than technofascism, artificial intelligence, transhumanism, surveillance, the abolition of privacy, and mind control.

Because they’re pretty much a culmination of all of the above, and maybe then some.
For now, while artists, actresses, label execs, and producers are exempt from absolute immunity, let’s help start uprooting their faction there, too. It’s just too easy.



By the way, Joe Tacopina was Donald Trump’s attorney up until 2024. I’m not an attorney, but the information in this file appears subpoena-worthy to me.



The Epstein bank records must be released
Secretary Bessent Has Repeatedly Refused to Give Epstein Bank Records to Senate Investigators, Impeding Senator Wyden’s Follow-The-Money Investigation. Bessent is complicit in protecting perpetrators of global child rape.
Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, has been digging into Mr. Epstein’s financial network for the past 3 years
The single largest suspicious activity report (SARS) reviewed by the congressional team was filed in late 2019 by JPMorgan for $1.1 billion. The report covered 4,700 transactions dating to 2003, including payments to women from Belarus, Russia and Turkmenistan.
Many of Mr. Epstein’s victims included young women from Eastern European countries.
The next largest was by Deutsche Bank for about $400 million, followed by Bank of New York Mellon for $378 million and then Bank of America, which filed reports on Mr. Black’s payments to Mr. Epstein. In 2023, JPMorgan paid $290 Million to Mr. Epstein’s victims and Deutsche paid $75 million to settle lawsuits that claimed the banks ignored red flags about potential sex trafficking.
NYT 7/19/2025
Question of the day:
Why hasn’t Donald Trump sued anyone who has accused him of being a pedophile?