The walls are closing in on the global elite, and they're scrambling like rats on a sinking ship.

Thomas Pritzker — billionaire executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels and cousin of Democrat Illinois Governor JB Pritzker — has resigned from his position after damning emails between himself and convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein were released by the Trump Department of Justice. Not retired. Not stepped back.Resigned.

And folks, what's in those emails should make every American's blood boil.

In one explosive exchange from 2010 — two full years after Epstein's first conviction — the predator wrote to Pritzker about a girl from Romania he'd met at his house, asking about getting her a position at one of the Hyatt hotels. Pritzker's response? He requested her resume.

Let that sink in. A convicted sex offender is discussing young foreign women, and this billionaire is playing along like it's a routine HR matter.

The communication between Pritzker and Epstein continued until 2019. A full decade of correspondence with a known monster. Now Pritzker claims he "exercised terrible judgment." That's the excuse we're supposed to accept?

Here's the question the mainstream media won't dare ask: Why does "terrible judgment" with a sex trafficker earn you a resignation letter instead of a pair of handcuffs?

Hillary Clinton was recently confronted about her family's ties to Epstein and delivered what can only be described as a rehearsed, lawyered-up non-answer. No links. Bill just took rides on the plane "for charity." She doesn't recall meeting Epstein.

Meanwhile, President Trump stated it plainly: he has been exonerated. The documents confirm no implications of criminality against the President. When Democrat Congressman Eric Swalwell — yes, the same Eric Swalwell connected to suspected Chinese spy Fang Fang — tried to weaponize the documents against Trump on live television, even CNN was forced to correct the record and shut him down.

Even Democrat Jamie Raskin admitted the DOJ has been in coverup mode for months. Half the documents remain unreleased. Three million more pages are being withheld from the public. Only four computers have been made available for congressional review, and Raskin himself admitted he's only reviewed about 40 documents out of millions.

Source: Next News Network