The Justice Department has been caught red-handed manipulating public access to Jeffrey Epstein files, quietly removing nearly 50,000 documents before claiming it was all just an "error" in their review process.
According to reports, DOJ officials acknowledged that 47,635 files tied to the federal investigation into the disgraced financier were taken offline and are now supposedly being "restored" to the public archive. But Patriots should be asking: what exactly was in those files that made the Deep State so nervous?
It's remarkable how the same DOJ that weaponized itself against President Trump suddenly develops competency issues when it comes to transparency around Epstein's elite client network. These aren't parking tickets we're talking about - these are documents that could expose the most powerful people in America.
The timing is suspicious, too. Just as Trump's second administration is ramping up efforts to drain the swamp and expose corruption, suddenly thousands of Epstein documents go missing due to "errors." How convenient.
Remember, this is the same Jeffrey Epstein who mysteriously died in federal custody while under 24/7 suicide watch. The same Epstein whose black book contained names of politicians, celebrities, and business leaders from both sides of the aisle.
While the DOJ claims they're restoring these files, we have to wonder: are they being restored in full, or will they be heavily redacted to protect the swamp creatures? And why were they removed in the first place without any public notification?
The American people have waited years for full transparency on the Epstein case. We deserve to know which powerful elites were involved in this network and what the federal government knew about it.
With Trump back in office and real reformers like Pam Bondi at the Justice Department, maybe we'll finally get the answers the Deep State has been hiding. But don't hold your breath - these people will fight tooth and nail to keep their secrets buried.
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network