Sunday, August 31, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Under the dark shadow of Jeffrey Epstein

The Epstein case

Jeffrey Epstein was not a lone madman. He was a cog in a machinery that few want to acknowledge exists, and which is still very much operating in the shadows.

Published today 12:35
Jeffrey Epstein with Ghislaine Maxwell to the left, to the right former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Robert Maxwell during a high-profile meeting in Amsterdam in 1989.
21 minute read

It is a strange feeling, almost forbidden, to sit down and speak openly about Jeffrey Epstein. That is how American journalist Tucker Carlson describes it when, in an hour-long interview, he meets podcaster and writer Darryl Cooper to try to untangle the threads of one of our time’s most scandalous and enigmatic stories. It is like stepping into a place where you are not really supposed to be – where the light exposes shadows many would rather leave untouched.

Since his arrest and alleged suicide, Jeffrey Epstein’s name has become synonymous with abuse of power, pedophilia, and international conspiracies. His story contains all the ingredients of a thriller: a young man without a degree and without money who managed to infiltrate the world’s wealthiest circles, build a network of compromising relationships, and at the same time play an unclear but central role in what appears to be high-level intelligence operations.

For those who truly want to understand how power works, Epstein is not just a scandalous figure. He is a symbol of an entire system – a network where state and private interests merge, where journalism’s watchdogs remain silent, and where a handful of people hold the tools to protect themselves, their friends, and their secrets. Above all, his fate raises the greatest question of all: who really rules the world?

In this article, we follow the conversation between Carlson and Cooper, and go through the key events and connections in Epstein’s life. We pause at the questions that few others dare to ask, and look more closely into one of our era’s most terrifying mysteries.

Who was Jeffrey Epstein? From Coney Island to the elite Dalton School

Jeffrey Epstein was born in the early 1950s in Coney Island, Brooklyn, the son of working-class parents. He grew up under modest circumstances in an area shaped by hard work, and there was nothing in his background that suggested he would one day move among the world’s most powerful people. He was a gifted student, especially distinguished in mathematics. He enrolled at Cooper Union and later at New York University, but never earned a degree.

His first step into the social elite came in 1974, when, despite lacking both an academic degree and a teaching license, he became a mathematics teacher at the prestigious Dalton School on the Upper East Side. Dalton had – and still has – a reputation for attracting the country’s intellectual elite and the children of the richest families. How a 20-year-old without a university degree or teaching experience landed a position there remains a mystery to this day.

The Dalton School on 91st Street, New York (2018). Photo: Jim Henderson/CC BY-SA 4.0

It was also at Dalton that he came into contact with parents of several of his future connections. Among others, he taught the son of Ace Greenberg, chairman of the investment bank Bear Stearns. Greenberg was impressed by the young Epstein’s social skills and “can-fix-anything” attitude, and their meeting would prove decisive for his career.

At the same time, rumors about his behavior at the school began to spread. Several of the female students noted that he showed up at student parties and tried to socialize with teenage girls outside of school hours. His time at Dalton was short – after less than two years he was forced to leave his position due to “poor performance.” By then, however, he had already begun climbing upward into networks where money, power, and secrets were intertwined.

Principal Donald Barr and the unlikely ties to power

Jeffrey Epstein’s hiring at the Dalton School cannot be understood without mentioning the school’s principal at the time: Donald Barr. Barr was an eccentric and charismatic figure with a background as both an author and an intelligence veteran. He had served in the OSS, the precursor to the CIA, during World War II, and afterwards remained close to the intelligence world. He was also known for having written a peculiar science fiction novel, Space Relations, set in a galactic empire where young people are kept as sex slaves – a detail that in hindsight seems chilling given what was later revealed about Epstein’s activities.

When Epstein applied for a job at Dalton, he had neither a degree nor experience, yet Barr hired him and put him in charge of teaching some of New York’s most privileged children. Perhaps Barr saw something in the young man – or perhaps he knew something the rest of us do not. There has been speculation that Epstein was already being groomed at that time as an “asset” for intelligence services, and that Barr simply acted as a kind of sponsor or gatekeeper for this purpose.

The link between Donald Barr and his son William Barr is even stranger. Decades later, William would become Attorney General under Donald Trump, responsible for the investigation into Epstein’s arrest and death. He was also a CIA veteran, having worked in the 1970s to protect the agency during the so-called Church and Pike hearings – Congress’s attempts to scrutinize the CIA’s abuses. It was a time when the CIA was under massive pressure and forced to conceal many of its most secret operations.

The fact that the man who gave Epstein his first step into the elite was also the father of the man who oversaw his death in custody is more than just a strange coincidence. For many, it is a telling sign of how small and closed the world was in which Jeffrey Epstein moved.

The son who cleaned up behind the scenes

Dalton’s charismatic principal Donald Barr’s son, William, would later himself become a central figure in Jeffrey Epstein’s story. Over the course of his career, he went from working at the CIA in the 1970s to becoming the U.S. Attorney General, first under George H.W. Bush and then under Donald Trump.

As a young lawyer at the CIA, Barr worked during the turbulent period when the congressional investigations led by Church and Pike exposed illegal operations and abuses within the intelligence community. Barr’s specific role was to shield the CIA from congressional oversight and prevent too many secrets from being revealed. It was here he established his reputation as a “fixer” for powerful men and their institutions.

When Epstein was arrested again in 2019, it was once more William Barr who, as Attorney General, oversaw the investigation. He first promised a thorough review of the entire network, but when Epstein was later found dead in his cell, many concluded that Barr had not followed through on his pledge – on the contrary, Barr managed to limit the investigation and no new high-profile figures were prosecuted.

Epstein’s first steps into finance – Bear Stearns and special assignments

After leaving Dalton, Epstein gained entry into Wall Street through Ace Greenberg. Greenberg was impressed by his confidence and ability to communicate both with top executives and with clients at their own level. Despite his young age and lack of academic credentials, Epstein was offered a position at Bear Stearns, one of the largest investment banks in the U.S. He began in the options division, but his true talent lay elsewhere.

After a short time, Epstein was placed in the so-called Special Products Division. It was a small unit that helped the bank’s most discreet and often controversial clients manage their money – hiding assets, avoiding taxes, and laundering dirty money. There he learned the techniques that would later become his signature: using shell companies, offshore accounts, and sophisticated tax schemes to move enormous sums under the radar.

Epstein was only 23 when he joined Bear Stearns and already had a remarkable ability to gain the trust of wealthy men with dubious motives. Four years later, in 1981, he was forced to leave the bank. The official reason was a disciplinary issue related to insider trading – a violation described internally as serious. Nevertheless, he never fully severed ties with his contacts at the bank and continued to use Bear Stearns as a financial partner for many years afterward.

By that time, he had already begun attracting his own clients and launched a new career as a freelance financial advisor. His only client at that time is said to have been Saudi billionaire and notorious arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, one of the world’s most influential middlemen in international business. Through him, Epstein would be drawn into a much larger game – one where money, politics, weapons, and intelligence services merged.

The meeting with the arms dealer and entry into the global shadow world

In 1981, just a few months after leaving Bear Stearns, Jeffrey Epstein found himself on a private plane heading to the Pentagon. On board was Douglas Lease, a British arms broker with strong ties to both the Saudi royal family and the British government. For a young former banker without an official position, the trip seemed inexplicable. What was Epstein doing on that plane with Lease?

The answer is that Epstein had begun establishing himself as a fixer for people operating in the shadow world of power. Douglas Lease was one of the chief architects behind the massive Al-Yamamah deal – the largest arms deal in British history, in which BAE Systems sold fighter jets to Saudi Arabia for tens of billions of dollars. The deal was riddled with accusations of widespread bribery, secret payments, and laundered money. According to estimates, Adnan Khashoggi, Epstein’s first client, alone received more than $200 million in commissions from that deal.

Saudi billionaire Adnan Khashoggi in Deauville, 1980s. Photo: Roland Godefroy / CC BY 3.0

Epstein functioned as a middleman and money launderer – someone willing to take dirty money and make it clean. That kind of service was indispensable in a world where powerful men and states needed to cover their tracks. Where other Wall Street advisers drew the line out of fear of the long arm of the law, Epstein was happy to go further.

Douglas Lease also introduced him to Robert Maxwell, the British media mogul and intelligence agent, and his daughter Ghislaine. That meeting would not only change Epstein’s trajectory – it would also tie him even more closely to the international intelligence world and begin the partnership for which he became most famous (and infamous).

Epstein had now moved from Wall Street’s open markets into the closed, uncompromising world where power is truly exercised – and public scrutiny is extremely limited.

Douglas Lease and the introduction to Robert Maxwell and Ghislaine

Douglas Lease quickly became one of the most decisive figures in Jeffrey Epstein’s life. Lease was a veteran of the international arms trade, serving as both a mentor and a gatekeeper to environments Epstein otherwise would never have entered. Lease was not only known as a central player in the Al-Yamamah deal, in which Britain secretly sold military equipment to Saudi Arabia for decades. He was also an important link between British intelligence services and their clients in the Middle East.

Epstein’s new acquaintance Maxwell was already, at the time, a legendary figure: British media mogul, billionaire, former soldier, and, as would later be revealed, also an intelligence agent with long-standing ties to Israeli Mossad. He owned newspapers and publishing houses across the globe and was a man both feared and admired in London’s power circles.

For years, Maxwell had acted as a middleman for Israeli intelligence, helping them smuggle technology to the Soviet Union in exchange for the Soviets allowing Jewish emigration, and financing their operations through his companies and pension funds. For him, Epstein was a useful newcomer – someone who could manage the money that needed to be moved secretly.

Through Robert Maxwell, Epstein also came to know his daughter, Ghislaine Maxwell. She would become his closest partner, both publicly and behind the scenes. She brought with her a kind of social access Epstein himself lacked and supplied him with connections in the British aristocracy, Hollywood, and Wall Street.

Douglas Lease’s role cannot be overstated. He was the one who built the bridge between Epstein and the world in which he would operate for decades: a secret world of money, sex, blackmail, and intelligence operations, where the Maxwell family was a central player.

The daughter who took over the game

Ghislaine Maxwell was in many ways her father Robert’s extension: intelligent, socially polished, and deeply versed in the games of power. When Robert Maxwell suddenly died in 1991, she moved to New York and took over part of the network her father had left behind.

Ghislaine and Epstein became inseparable. She became his confidante, hostess, and accomplice. Beyond opening doors into the British aristocracy, royal families, and international businessmen, she was also the one who organized many of the parties where young women were recruited and powerful men were compromised. According to several of his victims, it was she herself who in practice recruited girls into his network.

Several of Epstein’s victims have described how it was often Ghislaine who first approached them, posing as someone offering modeling jobs or internships and luring them into Epstein’s world. She supervised the operation with cold efficiency, and many saw her as the one who transformed his predatory behavior from that of an individual predator into a systematic recruitment apparatus.

When Epstein was arrested again in 2019, Ghislaine went into hiding for almost a year before she was caught herself. In 2022, she was sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in sex trafficking. Her sentencing served as a reminder that she was as central to the operation as Epstein himself – perhaps even more so.

Epstein as a pawn in the intelligence services’ game

One of the most puzzling aspects of Jeffrey Epstein’s life is how he repeatedly seemed to escape justice, despite overwhelming evidence of the crimes he had committed. Already when he was first arrested in 2007, federal prosecutors had access to at least 40 underage witnesses. Yet he walked away with a lenient plea deal that gave him minimal punishment and allowed him to leave jail during the day. How was this possible?

According to several accounts, the explanation was simple: he was an asset. When the then-prosecutor Alexander Acosta was later asked why he had agreed to the deal, he replied laconically that he had been told Epstein “belonged to intelligence” and therefore should be left alone. The details behind that statement have never been disclosed – but it points to something many within the intelligence world have long taken for granted: Epstein functioned as a so-called cut-out, a freelancer who does what official agents cannot do themselves.

Image from Jeffrey Epstein’s cell immediately after what appears to have been a murder.

The picture that emerges is not of a man who controlled everything himself, but of a pawn in a much larger game. His mission seems to have been to build networks, create compromising material on influential people, and handle black money. According to Darryl Cooper, this is a classic intelligence tactic: “People like him are used to recruit and bind others. It’s a way to gain control over people who would otherwise be out of reach“.

Several signs suggest that Epstein did not work for any single intelligence service but rather for a network of interests in which the CIA, Mossad, and perhaps even Russian actors cooperated when it suited them. In practice, he was a free agent – a man who built his own position by making himself indispensable to everyone who needed his services. That was what made him so difficult to prosecute and, ultimately, so dangerous.

That Epstein was a pawn rather than a lone mastermind does not make his actions any less reprehensible, but it shifts the focus away from him as an individual to the structure that made him possible – and that likely still exists.

The fixer role: How “freelancers” are used in the intelligence world

To truly understand Jeffrey Epstein’s role, one must understand how intelligence services operate in the gray zone between law and criminality. They have always used so-called fixers or freelancers who are not officially employed but who perform services the agencies do not want tied directly to themselves.

Epstein was a perfect fixer. He had no formal ties to any government agency, but he had a rare ability to earn trust, build networks, and offer exactly the services the powerful needed: discretion, blackmail, and laundered money.

Figures like him are used to give intelligence services a form of “plausible deniability”. If something goes wrong, the state can claim the person never worked for them – which, technically, is true. At the same time, the relationship is mutually dependent: the fixer protects his patrons by carrying their secrets, and they protect him by keeping him out of reach of the law.

Darryl Cooper sums it up well in the interview: “Epstein was no mastermind pulling the strings. He was a man who built his life on being indispensable to those who do”.

Iran-Contra and Epstein’s role in the scandals of the 1980s

During the 1980s, Jeffrey Epstein was woven into some of the biggest political and financial scandals of modern times. According to several sources, he was a key behind-the-scenes figure when hundreds of millions of dollars needed to be moved secretly between arms dealers, governments, and rebel groups – a task that suited him perfectly.

One of the largest operations was Iran-Contra. The U.S. government, under President Reagan, wanted both to support the anti-communist Contra guerrillas in Nicaragua and, at the same time, reach an accommodation with Iran in the midst of an arms embargo. The solution became a covert system in which the U.S., via intermediaries including Israel and Saudi actors, sold weapons to Iran at inflated prices. The profits from these sales were then funneled to the Contras.

According to Darryl Cooper, Epstein played a role as a money launderer and adviser. With Iran-Contra, Epstein demonstrated that he could deliver under pressure – and that he was willing to do things other banks and advisers refused. For his patrons he was indispensable. For his enemies he was invisible.

It was a role he would continue to play in different guises for the rest of his life: the man who ensured that secrets remained secrets, at a price only the very wealthiest could afford.

The Al-Yamamah deal: The arms scandal that shaped the network

Alongside Iran-Contra, the Al-Yamamah deal was the other major scandal that defined the power networks of the 1980s and secured Jeffrey Epstein a place within them. Al-Yamamah was a massive arms deal between Britain and Saudi Arabia, in which British BAE Systems sold fighter jets and other military equipment worth tens of billions of dollars.

The deal was officially a legitimate export contract, but in practice it was riddled with bribes, slush funds, and secret commissions to Saudi princes and middlemen. One of the largest recipients of these funds was Adnan Khashoggi, Epstein’s most important client during this period. According to several reports, Khashoggi alone received over $200 million in commissions – money that had to be hidden and laundered.

This was where Epstein came into the picture. His skill in moving money and his discreet demeanor made him indispensable. He helped Khashoggi and other players funnel the money through shell companies and offshore accounts, well beyond the reach of journalists and regulators.

Al-Yamamah showed that Epstein already understood the rules of the game: he did not build his wealth on investments or business strategies, but on being the one who moved and concealed the wealth of others – and in the process, he learned how to gain influence over them.

Robert Maxwell: from war hero to Mossad agent and media mogul

To understand Jeffrey Epstein’s path into the innermost circles of power, one must understand the man who brought him there: Robert Maxwell. Maxwell was one of the 20th century’s most complex and enigmatic figures – a survivor, hero, villain, and spy all at once.

Born in 1923 into a Jewish family in Czechoslovakia, Maxwell managed to escape the Nazis and made his way to Britain, where as a young man he enlisted in the British Army. He fought with great courage during World War II and was decorated for his service. After the war, he worked for a time in British intelligence operations in Berlin, where he learned how to maneuver between East and West and built valuable contacts in the Soviet Union.

In the 1950s, he became a British citizen and began building his media empire by acquiring publishing houses and newspapers. He became the owner of the Daily Mirror and one of Europe’s largest media companies, using his fortune to buy political influence. At the same time, according to several former Israeli agents, he secretly worked for Mossad. His mission to smuggle advanced technology to the Soviet Union in exchange for Jewish emigrants being allowed to leave for Israel was a delicate and highly dangerous balancing act.

Robert Maxwell (far right) with Henry Kissinger at the Global Economic Panel in Amsterdam, 1989. Photo: Public domain

Maxwell was known for his brutality toward his employees and his shameless opportunism. His companies were plundered of billions when he secretly took money from pension funds to cover his own losses. When the truth began to catch up with him in 1991, he was found dead in the sea off the Canary Islands, floating near his yacht Lady Ghislaine. Whether his death was an accident, suicide, or a planned execution has never been determined.

It was this Robert Maxwell who took Epstein under his wing and introduced him to the network of intelligence services, bankers, and power brokers that he himself had been part of for decades. And it was he who brought Epstein together with his daughter Ghislaine – a combination that would have fateful consequences.

Epstein’s ties to Maxwell and the mysterious connection to Israel

The relationship between the Maxwell family and Epstein was more than a personal alliance. It also opened the door to the Israeli intelligence world. For decades, Robert Maxwell had been a valuable asset to Mossad, and several former Israeli officers have confirmed that he regularly helped fund and cover their operations. He provided money, fronts, and logistics when Mossad needed to act abroad.

Epstein seems to have continued along the same path. His work with compromising material on powerful men, his role as a money launderer, and his social skills made him a valuable asset for those seeking influence over American politicians and financiers. As Darryl Cooper notes: “He probably wasn’t employed by Mossad, but he was one of many cut-outs – people you use when you can’t send a real agent.”

A particularly troubling detail is that Epstein and Ghislaine over time appear to have collected compromising information on a long list of figures in the American establishment. At their properties, video cameras were found in every room, and several of his victims have testified that guests were regularly filmed without their knowledge. For anyone seeking to influence American politics from Tel Aviv or London, this was invaluable.

The “Israeli connection” has long been denied by official representatives, but the pattern is clear, and it reinforces the picture of Epstein as more than just a freelancing sex offender. He was a pawn in a larger game where states and private actors cooperated to gather influence in the form of secrets.

Who protected him?

One question echoes throughout the entire story of Jeffrey Epstein: who was it that protected him? How could he, for decades, run his operation openly, recruit and exploit underage girls, socialize with some of the world’s most influential men – and yet time and again avoid serious consequences?

When he was first prosecuted in Florida in 2007, prosecutors had already gathered testimony from more than 40 young girls who described in detail how they were brought to Epstein’s house to be abused. But despite the evidence, a deal was struck that surprised even legal experts. Epstein pleaded guilty to a lesser offense, received an extremely lenient sentence, and was allowed to serve it in a way that most resembled house arrest, with freedom to leave confinement during the day.

When Alexander Acosta, the federal prosecutor who approved the deal, was much later pressed for an explanation, he said he had been told that Epstein “belonged to intelligence” and that he should be left alone. The cryptic explanation, which Acosta never elaborated on, raised more questions than it answered.

Even today, it remains unclear exactly which “service” Epstein belonged to, but several insiders point out that he was more likely a freelance asset than a formally employed agent. Such an asset is valuable precisely because it is fluid – an actor who can be used by different interests and who has enough on influential people to create a protective shield around himself.

Epstein’s death in jail in August 2019 only fueled the suspicions further. Officially, it was declared a suicide, but under circumstances that caused both doctors and former prison officials to question it. The cameras didn’t work. The guards “slept”. His cellmate had suddenly been moved. According to a medical examiner, the injuries on his neck were more consistent with strangulation than hanging.

As Darryl Cooper notes: There’s not many people who can murder an inmate in federal lockup in Manhattan“. The question remains: who was pulling the strings?

Conspiracies or cold facts

When the story of Jeffrey Epstein comes up, it is still common for it to be dismissed as a “conspiracy theory”. Talking about intelligence services, kompromat, and international networks is considered by many to be speculative, if not paranoid. But as Darryl Cooper emphasizes in the interview: there is nothing conspiratorial about calling a spade a spade when it is lying right on the table.

The methods Epstein and his network used are well-known within the intelligence world. The compromising of individuals – putting them in situations where they can be photographed or filmed engaging in sexual or illegal acts – is a classic strategy used by intelligence services worldwide. Whoever controls compromising material, kompromat, controls people.

Epstein’s homes in New York and the Virgin Islands were equipped with surveillance cameras in every room. Witnesses have testified how guests were taken to secluded rooms where they were unknowingly recorded while exploiting underage girls. This material became a form of power, a currency that Epstein could trade with his handlers – or that his handlers could use to secure their grip on influential figures.

Cooper points out that it is more of a “conspiracy” to pretend these connections don’t exist than to investigate them. For in the world where intelligence services, political leaders, and private actors operate together, money and secrets are just as important as weapons. And secrets are for sale.

To call it a “conspiracy theory” is therefore a convenient way for those who want to avoid uncomfortable questions to avoid digging deeper.

Why do the media refuse to investigate the story in depth?

Despite the fact that the Jeffrey Epstein affair has all the ingredients for a journalistic world sensation – sex, power, international conspiracies, intelligence services, and compromising material on world leaders – mainstream media have shown a strange reluctance to dig deeply. Sure, they reported on his arrest and trials, and on his death. But no major newspapers or TV networks have truly followed the threads to the end.

Darryl Cooper calls it “the great riddle”: why aren’t there reporters outside Alexander Acosta’s house every day asking what he meant when he said Epstein “belonged to intelligence”? Why has no one asked the obvious questions of William Barr, who oversaw the official investigation after Epstein’s death? Why do we only get the occasional documentary about the abuse, but no major investigations into the network that protected him?

It is not because the story lacks explosive power – on the contrary. It is too full of powerful names. Many of those who may have been compromised, or who themselves had influence over Epstein, belong to the same social circles as the journalists who would be investigating them. Others control media companies or have enough influence to shut things down.

Cooper points out that self-censorship is a big part of the problem: reporters know that if they dig too deeply into certain subjects, they risk their own careers. Not asking questions is more comfortable, and in the short term less dangerous.

The fact that so many obvious questions have never been asked is in itself a sign that the story is not just about Epstein. It is about a larger network that is still intact – and about a press corps that, knowingly or not, has learned to look the other way.

As Cooper says: “The interesting thing to me about that whole saga was not the idea that there’s some big crazy conspiracy involving just any of that stuff. The interesting thing to me was the things that were just 100% fact”.

Who really runs the world?

When examining Jeffrey Epstein’s life, a bigger picture emerges that is both frightening and revealing. He was a man who seemingly came from nowhere, without a degree, without wealth, and with a career built on strange coincidences. Yet he managed to climb to the top of the global power pyramid – because he offered what the truly powerful needed: discretion, kompromat, and money in the right pockets.

Epstein was no lone madman. He was a cog in a machine that few want to admit exists: a global network where national intelligence services, private fixers, and corrupt politicians collaborate in the shadows. Where crimes are used as tools. Where secrets are currency. Where compromising material is power.

As Darryl Cooper points out, Epstein was not unique. He was just unusually visible. For every Epstein exposed, there are many others still operating in the dark, protected by the same networks that once protected him. That is why no one really wants to know the whole truth – because it would reveal how little control we actually have over our institutions.

His death did not end the story. On the contrary. It left us with a reminder that the forces he served still remain. And that the question we should be asking is not: Who was Jeffrey Epstein? but rather: Who needed him – and who is still pulling the strings?

 

Reza Nasouri

TNT is truly independent!

We don’t have a billionaire owner, and our unique reader-funded model keeps us free from political or corporate influence. This means we can fearlessly report the facts and shine a light on the misdeeds of those in power.

Consider a donation to keep our independent journalism running…

Democrats push Trump for full transparency on Epstein probe

The Epstein case

Published 31 July 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D) is now attempting to use the "rule of five" law to compel the US Department of Justice to release the Epstein investigation.
3 minute read

The Democrats want to force the US Department of Justice to release the entire Epstein investigation. Through a rarely used law, they hope to obtain the material that Donald Trump previously promised to publish – but which he is now accused of withholding.

During Trump’s election campaign, he was clear that he wanted to release the convicted sex offender’s “black book” with names of clients who, among other things, flew on the scandal-ridden “Lolita Express” to a private island in the Caribbean – where there is testimony regarding sex trafficking of young women and girls.

Furthermore, Trump also said he wanted to release classified documents regarding the Epstein investigation that have not been published to the public.

In May this year, in connection with an internal investigation, the US Department of Justice announced that they would not release the documents, citing that the material contains child pornography and other sensitive information.

The investigation also claims that no black book with customers was found or that Jeffrey Epstein blackmailed clients.

Accused of cover-up

According to reports from The Wall Street Journal, Trump’s name allegedly appears multiple times, and the Department of Justice is said to have informed Trump about this. Trump subsequently supported the decision not to release the investigation, which led to sharp criticism from certain voters and political commentators.

American political commentator Nick Fuentes has also accused the Trump administration of covering up the Epstein investigation. Following the criticism, Trump chose to release certain documents regarding the investigation, but a large portion of the material remains classified.

Broken his promise

Now the Democrats want to force the US Department of Justice to release the documents regarding the investigation, reports CBS News. They plan to do this by using a law called the “rule of five”.

The situation with the Epstein files is very simple – Donald Trump promised transparency and he has broken that promise, says minority leader Chuck Schumer at a press conference. As a candidate, Trump said on many occasions he would release the Epstein files if elected, and yet he has refused to do so.

In brief, the law makes it possible to force federal agencies to release documents if five members of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs request it. The law, which was enacted in 1928, is used very rarely and therefore it is difficult to predict whether it will hold up in court.

Chuck Schumer said the request covers “all documents, files, evidence or other materials in the possession of the Department of Justice or the FBI related to the case of United States v. Jeffrey Epstein” but also that “the private information of any victims is protected”.

Despite Trump’s previous promises and the Democrats’ intensified demands, it remains unclear whether the entire investigation will ever become fully public, or whether legal and confidentiality barriers will set limits on what the public gets to know.

Trump to release more Epstein files amid mounting pressure

The Epstein case

Published 18 July 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Donald Trump with his future wife Melania Trump in 2000 together with Jeffrey Epstein and his Mossad-connected associate Ghislaine Maxwell.
2 minute read

The American president now agrees to release certain additional documents regarding the Epstein affair, following mounting discontent within the MAGA movement.

Trump has also been pressured by media mogul Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal, which published an obscene drawing they claim he made for Epstein, prompting Trump to announce that he will now sue the newspaper and Murdoch himself.

Trump’s decision to put a lid on the Jeffrey Epstein affair has sparked outraged reactions within his own voter base. The Trump administration’s Department of Justice has, among other things, determined that there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding Epstein’s alleged suicide in his prison cell and that no compromising “client list” exists.

The approach has been perceived as a cover-up campaign that goes against his own campaign promises, despite being linked to a blackmail operation by Israeli intelligence services. Donald Trump has gone so far as to attack his own supporters and call those who want the president to release documents “weaklings”, while emphasizing that he distances himself from those who had expected more comprehensive revelations about high-profile clients in Epstein’s network.

I have had more success in 6 months than perhaps any President in our Country’s history, and all these people want to talk about, with strong prodding by the Fake News and the success starved Dems, is the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax“, writes a frustrated Trump on his Truth Social platform.

Allegedly drew obscene picture for Epstein

Now the Wall Street Journal is publishing damaging information claiming that Trump personally drew an obscene picture for Jeffrey Epstein in connection with Epstein’s 50th birthday.

If there were any truth at all on the Epstein Hoax, as it pertains to President Trump, this information would have been revealed by Comey, Brennan, Crooked Hillary, and other Radical Left Lunatics years ago. It certainly would not have sat in a file waiting for ‘TRUMP’ to have won three Elections. This is yet another example of FAKE NEWS!” Trump writes in a new post about the matter on Truth Social.

He simultaneously announces that he is now allowing the release of certain classified documents regarding the affair.

In recordings with Jeffrey Epstein, made in August 2017, Epstein claims that he and Trump were very close for a long time and enjoyed to “fuck the wives of his best friends”. He suggests that Trump had sex with his current wife Melania for the first time aboard Epstein’s notorious aircraft, the so-called Lolita Express.

FBI official in audio leak: “Law enforcement turned a blind eye” to Jeffrey Epstein

The Epstein case

Published 13 July 2025
– By Editorial Staff

3 minute read

A high-ranking FBI official accuses the justice system of having “turned a blind eye” to Jeffrey Epstein in a leaked audio recording. Rami Hasan, a senior FBI official, says that “you can see where the law enforcement either turned a blind eye… or missed things (on Jeffrey Epstein)”. In the same recording, he describes the FBI as “a shit show”.

The statements come as the Trump administration’s handling of Epstein documents draws sharp criticism from both the president’s supporters and opponents, after Attorney General Pam Bondi previously promised to release extensive material that is now claimed not to exist.

Internal criticism of FBI’s Epstein investigation

In the leaked audio recording, published by O’Keefe Media Group, Hasan says:

– You can see where the law enforcement either turned a blind eye… or missed things (on Jeffrey Epstein).

Jeffrey Epstein was the American-Jewish financier who was accused of extensive sex trafficking of minors before he suddenly died in his cell in 2019 while awaiting trial.

– There is opportunities there, just from like hearing and listening, Hasan says in the recording according to O’Keefe Media Group regarding the investigation.

When asked if he believes Epstein was murdered, Hasan responds:

– I think he just killed himself… I mean, even the FBI came out and said he killed himself.

Hasan also commented on how government officials allowed influencers and internet personalities to distribute Epstein-related documents, which he called “messy” and said lacked clarity and professionalism.

Scandals surrounding the Epstein case

Jeffrey Epstein, who reportedly died in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York in August 2019 while awaiting trial, has become the subject of extensive questioning regarding the circumstances of his death. The official conclusion that he committed suicide has faced widespread criticism and been surrounded by mysterious circumstances.

In July, the Department of Justice and FBI released a joint report claiming that there is no longer any “client list” of Epstein’s alleged co-conspirators, and that there is also no evidence that he was murdered. The report also established that no further charges are expected in the case.

Criticism of Bondi’s handling

Hasan’s statements come as Attorney General Pam Bondi faces growing criticism for her previous claims about Epstein material. In February, Bondi admitted in a Fox News interview that she had a “client list” on her desk that she would review. Later, she claimed that the government had “tens of thousands” of Epstein-related videos in its possession involving sex with children.

These statements directly contradict a recently presented report from the Department of Justice and FBI, which now conversely claims that no such client list exists at all, and that all available investigative material has already been accounted for.

Internal conflicts at the FBI

Tensions have also reached the FBI’s leadership. According to Fox News, a heated discussion arose between FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino and Attorney General Pam Bondi at the White House on Wednesday regarding the handling of Epstein files.

Both Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel had previously, before taking their current positions, questioned the official version of Epstein’s death. Since taking their posts, however, they have publicly maintained that Epstein took his own life.

When President Trump was asked about the Epstein case during a government meeting this week, he said irritably: “Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?” and called the deceased financier “a creep”.

Source behind the leak

O’Keefe Media Group was founded by James O’Keefe after he left Project Veritas in 2023. The FBI and the US Department of Justice have reportedly been contacted by O’Keefe Media Group regarding Hasan's statements, but have not yet commented on the leak.

Trump administration accused of covering up Epstein investigation

The Epstein case

Published 9 July 2025
– By Editorial Staff
3 minute read

The Trump administration is deliberately working to cover up the investigation surrounding Jeffrey Epstein. This is the claim made by American political commentator Nick Fuentes in a statement on X.

He argues that the administration, despite previous promises of transparency, is now lying about Epstein’s death and burying the story of his alleged blackmail ring. He also points to connections between Epstein and Israeli interests.

Jewish-American financier Jeffrey Epstein, previously convicted of sex crimes, was arrested in 2019 for sex trafficking of minors. His case gained global attention due to his close ties to influential figures in politics and business. Epstein died in his cell in August 2019, officially by suicide, but the circumstances have given rise to speculation that he was murdered. The investigation has since focused on his alleged blackmail operation, where he is accused of filming powerful individuals in compromising situations. Epstein was first charged in 2005 for soliciting minors for prostitution.

Despite serious charges, Epstein received an unusually lenient sentence in 2008, which according to Fuentes was due to his connections to intelligence services.

– Former Attorney General Acosta said (this goes back to 2008), Epstein is intelligence.

Allegations of cover-up

Fuentes’ central criticism is directed at the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein investigation. He claims that the administration has not only broken promises of openness but is actively working to conceal the truth.

– This is literally the opposite of what Trump supporters voted for. It’s the opposite. This is not only not disclosure, this is a cover-up.

According to Fuentes, the Department of Justice has now stated that Epstein committed suicide, that no client list exists (with politicians and business leaders who allegedly participated in the abuse, editor’s note) and that further investigations are unnecessary. He sees this as an attempt to end the discussion.

– Now they’re lying about it and covering it up. They’re actually burying it. They’re making it less accessible than before.

Fuentes also points to evidence from Epstein’s residences, where cameras and recording equipment were found, which he says supports the theory of a blackmail ring. He questions the Department of Justice’s claims that no such operation took place.

Connections to Israel and powerful actors

Fuentes highlights Epstein’s alleged connections to Israeli intelligence services, particularly Mossad. He mentions Epstein’s financial support from Jewish billionaires in the Mega Group, an organization that according to Fuentes promotes pro-Israeli interests.

– He got his money from Les Wexner and the Bronfman family from Mega Group. They’re both Israeli operators.

Fuentes also highlights that Epstein’s accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, is the daughter of Robert Maxwell, a British media mogul who is alleged to have been a Mossad agent.

– His girlfriend and accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell was the daughter of Mossad super spy Robert Maxwell.

He argues that these connections suggest that Epstein may have operated a blackmail ring on Israel’s behalf, something he believes the Trump administration is now trying to conceal.

Timing and political motives

Fuentes notes that the Department of Justice’s statements about the Epstein case being closed coincided with a visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the White House on July 7, 2025. He sees this as suspicious and connects it to the administration’s pro-Israeli stance.

– His pro-Israel deputy FBI director, buried and covered up the story of the pro-Israel blackmail organizer Jeffrey Epstein the same day that Netanyahu visited the White House for the third time.

He points to key figures like Kash Patel, Dan Bongino and Pam Bondi, whom he describes as strongly pro-Israeli, and questions their role in burying the story.

– Why, oh why, would the super Zionists, Pam Bondi and Dan Bongino, Pam Bondi being from the state of Florida, which is run by Jews, why would they bury the story of the Israeli spy running a blackmail ring known as Jeffrey Epstein? he questions ironically in conclusion.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
Consider a donation.

You can donate any amount of your choosing, one-time payment or even monthly.
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Dont miss another article!

Sign up for our newsletter today!

Take part of uncensored news – free from industry interests and political correctness from the Polaris of Enlightenment – every week.