Opinion The Epstein Files Should Never Have Been Released

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Every day seems to bring new reports of financiers, academics, politicians and royalty (among others) who cozied up to Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender whose predation took a horrendous toll on innocent lives. With accountability for people in power in short supply, it can be hard to see a downside in the huge dump of documents relating to Mr. Epstein and his various associates.

But we should recognize the release of millions of pages of the Epstein files as both a sign of institutional failure and a cause for concern. If our justice system were working properly, the public would never have such access.

In the not-too-distant past, most people probably would have at least grudgingly accepted a regime in which prosecutors and law-enforcement agents sorted through materials from a sprawling investigation and made public only those portions needed to properly handle a case. The additional information that might interest us, and perhaps even help improve society, would remain secret. Federal prosecutors could generally be trusted to focus on their narrow criminal enforcement mission and to not abuse the tools given them for that limited purpose. No longer.

Calls for the Epstein files’ release predate the Trump administration. But they are now online and searchable because too many Americans didn’t trust the Justice Department’s leadership with control of them. In the past, departmental leaders could limit suspicions about their motives by conspicuously leaving a matter such as this to career subordinates, rather than political appointees. Seen by so many as having fired or driven out prosecutors and agents who refused to become tools of President Trump’s will, Attorney General Pam Bondi lacked credibility. She couldn’t get away with asking the public to rely on the apolitical and independent judgment of those who remained. The eventual result was the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

The release of the files is also cause for concern because so much of the raw investigative material in them — untold layers of hearsay, unverified accusations and vague circumstantial connections — ought not be released for the public to pick over.

We don’t know the degree to which the Justice Department has appropriately or inappropriately withheld or redacted documents. We do know that any effort to protect victims was woefully inadequate, as explicit photos and identifying information of many women, and possibly girls, have been found in the files. The government’s obligation not to revictimize people ought to be one of its highest priorities. Here, it failed.
We give federal prosecutors and agents a broad range of information-gathering tools that private parties and even most government agencies aren’t allowed to use.

At the heart of criminal enforcement authority is the power to invade privacy. Legally available tools include search warrants, wiretaps, grand jury subpoenas and administrative subpoenas. That is how criminal investigators gain access to our emails, our private conversations, and our phone, bank and medical records. In addition, we allow prosecutors and agents to use the threat of prosecution to gain the cooperation of witnesses.

These coercive investigative tools can and have been misused, as when prosecutors and F.B.I. agents illegally rummaged through my emails and computer files in an effort to come up with a case against James Comey, the former F.B.I. director. Cogent arguments have been made for more rigorous legal restriction of these tools and the government’s use of information obtained with them. But so long as we think federal criminal laws are worth enforcing, we need to give federal enforcers a way to get information about criminal activity that, by its very nature, is closely held, and to pierce veils of privacy that normally shield our everyday activities from prying eyes or ears.

The tools we give the government are justified not only by the importance of the criminal enforcement mission but by the care and professional judgment prosecutors and agents are required to exercise with the information they obtain with those tools. Government secrecy may conceal misconduct or atrocious judgment. We have yet to understand the decision by U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, almost two decades ago, not to charge Mr. Epstein. (Mr. Epstein was ultimately convicted in state court in 2008, after taking a plea deal.) Still, prosecutors’ use of the materials they collect is ordinarily bounded by their mission — to charge individuals (or not to charge them), to satisfy disclosure obligations after a case is brought and, if possible, to convince a jury or to obtain a guilty plea.

When materials collected in a criminal investigation get released in bulk for public consumption, the justification for the coercive and privacy-invading tools we give investigators gets a lot weaker. Institutions claiming to protect user or customer privacy might be more likely to resist valid uses of these tools. Witnesses who would otherwise speak to investigators about sensitive matters might start to rethink whether they want to provide grist for internet searches.

We have to reckon with what happens when a huge investigative haul — with its swirling mix of gossip, casual association and possible criminal misconduct — is opened up for public viewing. The justice system should never be the only means of holding people accountable. The power of shame can be a good thing, and some reputations deserve to be tarnished. But informal accountability processes can easily slide into misuse of unfiltered source material.

At a time when the Justice Department seems intent on filling the criminal docket with baseless prosecutions of its perceived enemies, many might not mourn a spectacle that highlights the lack of public confidence in the department. Or one that appears to weaken the justification for extraordinary prosecutorial powers generally. But we need to think about a future in which real crimes fill the docket, when coercive information-gathering tools are needed to pursue them. Those of us who want to preserve those tools and the justification for them ought to regret the dump of the Epstein files, even as we rummage through them ourselves.

Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/23/opinion/epstein-files-justice-department.html

Archive: https://archive.ph/O1smI
 
When materials collected in a criminal investigation get released in bulk for public consumption, the justification for the coercive and privacy-invading tools we give investigators gets a lot weaker.
...And that's a bad thing?

If people go full retard, that's on them. The files are a treasure trove of information on what the wealthy retards who've been running society do while we subsidize their horrid lifestyles. Everyone deserves to know the truth of where our money goes and who is wasting it. Fuck your pussyfooting about what you really want: for the people who pay you not to be exposed for what they are.
 
The guy writing this article is named Daniel Richman and he is a swamp creature to the core. He was the guy that Comey instructed to leak his memos detailing discussions with Trump during his first term. Its nice to see that even the NYTimes peanut gallery in the comment section is universally panning this article as well. The notion that the DOJ was ever legitimate or devoid of corruption is a farce.
 
There's always that one fox who thinks the hounds will go easy on them if they don't run......
 
Let's cut the bullshit here.

It was way past time for these 'elites' to be knocked down a bunch of pegs. These motherfuckers got by with this shit WAY too long, secure in their knowledge that being part of the 'elite' they were safe from any reckoning for their misdeeds.

And yeah, we have the right to know who was victimized, so we can see the depth of the depravities committed against these victims, and so we can see what, if anything, has been done to make these victims whole again.

Fully believe the American people, and those in other countries, are more than qualified to pass judgement on what happened and who did it, likely moreso than any bought-and-paid-for judges/prosecutors/legislators/elected officials.

This is yet some further unraveling of the fabric of the social compact.

Like to think no American military officers were part of Epstein's web of evil. Have no plan to look at the files; these people inhabit a different and worse world than I live in, and I like to think most of you inhabit. In my opinion, the vast majority of KFers know right from wrong, their values weren't perverted or destroyed by money/power/fame.

Fuck those assholes, just fuck 'em.
 
But we should recognize the release of millions of pages of the Epstein files as both a sign of institutional failure and a cause for concern. If our justice system were working properly, the public would never have such access.

In the not-too-distant past, most people probably would have at least grudgingly accepted a regime in which prosecutors and law-enforcement agents sorted through materials from a sprawling investigation and made public only those portions needed to properly handle a case. The additional information that might interest us, and perhaps even help improve society, would remain secret. Federal prosecutors could generally be trusted to focus on their narrow criminal enforcement mission and to not abuse the tools given them for that limited purpose. No longer.

I get the thrust of the argument here. in a society with properly working authority structures, the public release of these documents wouldn't be necessary. and I agree to some extent; the vast majority of the public is not equipped to glean any useful information from this, especially in this era where most people exist to some degree in some variety of internet echo chamber. most people are reactionary apes with no inner monologue, and this type of thing just gins up retards and creates incoherent controversy. however, I disagree that it represents some failure on the part of the authorities. keeping everything in a closed system makes those authorities vulnerable to coercion, the very thing this author is bemoaning. the shameful acts of the rich should be aired to the public periodically. nobody should be free from the fear of scrutiny from the rest of society. governments should be afraid of their people. the peasant masses are a bunch of flailing retards, yes, but they are also an important check on the hubris of the powerful.
 
Oh look, it's the Vampire Squid Party writing an opinion piece to remind you not to look too deeply into that whole vampire squid business.
 
What difference does it make? Europeans are sending federal rape squads against their Epstein pedos but I doubt we’ll do shit to ours.
 
But we should recognize the release of millions of pages of the Epstein files as both a sign of institutional failure and a cause for concern. If our justice system were working properly, the public would never have such access.

In the not-too-distant past, most people probably would have at least grudgingly accepted a regime in which prosecutors and law-enforcement agents sorted through materials from a sprawling investigation and made public only those portions needed to properly handle a case. The additional information that might interest us, and perhaps even help improve society, would remain secret. Federal prosecutors could generally be trusted to focus on their narrow criminal enforcement mission and to not abuse the tools given them for that limited purpose. No longer.
At the heart of criminal enforcement authority is the power to invade privacy. Legally available tools include search warrants, wiretaps, grand jury subpoenas and administrative subpoenas. That is how criminal investigators gain access to our emails, our private conversations, and our phone, bank and medical records. In addition, we allow prosecutors and agents to use the threat of prosecution to gain the cooperation of witnesses.

These coercive investigative tools can and have been misused, as when prosecutors and F.B.I. agents illegally rummaged through my emails and computer files in an effort to come up with a case against James Comey, the former F.B.I. director. Cogent arguments have been made for more rigorous legal restriction of these tools and the government’s use of information obtained with them. But so long as we think federal criminal laws are worth enforcing, we need to give federal enforcers a way to get information about criminal activity that, by its very nature, is closely held, and to pierce veils of privacy that normally shield our everyday activities from prying eyes or ears.
I like how this child raping demon faggot has the gall to say that the government should work in secret, then decry their power and ability to invade privacy if/when misused. The only thing I partially agree with is not to release things if an investigation is going on, you don't want to spook the people(s) you may be investigating. But outside of that, if you believe the news, Epstein is dead and Ghislaine is doing time in prison. America doesn't seem to be interested in holding any of the people in the emails accountable, and I'd wager any other government worth their salt already had them, and was just sitting on them. So rationally, the only thing left to do is to publish them. Sunshine is one of the best disinfectants, if you're gonna argue you don't want crimes or other behaviors to come to light, I can only assume you have something to hide; and while I'm sure plenty of philosphers will be quick to point out making baseless accusations like that lead to tyranny or whatever. I'd like to point out the world governments had a Mossad agent trafficking children and doing a lot of other haneous shit, and then you expect me to not distrust anyone in a position of any power. Everyone seemed to fucking know, they wrote emails about it, law enforcement had everything, the CIA has a fucking kill list and for some reason this guy and his friends got hard passes. The very positions of enforcement you want to say deserve to work in the dark, you now claim these files should've been left in the dark. Hmm, very interesting Mr. Philosopher, make peace with whatever God you consort with and face the fucking wall.
 
What difference does it make? Europeans are sending federal rape squads against their Epstein pedos but I doubt we’ll do shit to ours.
Never, in all my years, would I have thought that when we finally find a burning trash pile of criminal behavior filled with smoke around literally everyone we despise who runs society, we'd choose to point at the smoke and say "Well.. ACKSHUALLY..."
 
I get the point, but this Epstein situation is so special, that public needed to know either way.
 
What difference does it make? Europeans are sending federal rape squads against their Epstein pedos but I doubt we’ll do shit to ours.
the euro arrests are over confidential/classified info being given to epstein, nothing to do with pedophilia. i have yet to see any real proof of a pedophile cabal outside of sketchy, ambigious photos and a gaggle of women and politicans saying they'll totally name the pedos. in that regard, the epstien files are worthless.
 
I get the thrust of the argument here. in a society with properly working authority structures, the public release of these documents wouldn't be necessary. and I agree to some extent; the vast majority of the public is not equipped to glean any useful information from this, especially in this era where most people exist to some degree in some variety of internet echo chamber. most people are reactionary apes with no inner monologue, and this type of thing just gins up retards and creates incoherent controversy. however, I disagree that it represents some failure on the part of the authorities. keeping everything in a closed system makes those authorities vulnerable to coercion, the very thing this author is bemoaning. the shameful acts of the rich should be aired to the public periodically. nobody should be free from the fear of scrutiny from the rest of society. governments should be afraid of their people. the peasant masses are a bunch of flailing retards, yes, but they are also an important check on the hubris of the powerful.

journalists are going to say the epstein files are bad because people are reading the files instead of listening to them, nothing more. The pretense of morality is something you're reading between the lines. It's not there. their instinct is to reject and to prop up some fake and gay alternative but there isn't any alternative, every single road ends up leading back to epstein somehow anyways. Its the herald for the death of the media paradigm where journalists dominate. the internet makes the middleman unnecessary. I can call elon musk a retarded faggot and he's going to read it. That's never been something the common man has been able to do before, you used to have to rely on journalists buskering for credibility. Now they're just buskering for cash.

look, the propaganda machine created to de-escalate america from world war 2 was never dismantled and it just turned into the national security apparatus for the cold war. But when the cold war collapsed 40 years ago it was just taken over by corporations that became puppets for rich people to do whatever they wanted. Like it probably existed in that form already, but back in the day they at least had a pretense of a job to do. nowadays the only job these institutions have is sucking the elite's dick and telling you to send more money to israel. Despite that you STILL have people still holding the banner for the "winning side of history" like they're the last stalwarts of morality in a compromised world, but you don't even have to squint to see that they're just acting as gay cheerleaders for rich people.

For years people have been instinctively avoiding talking about this stuff because everyone but your mentally ill aunt knows that it's toxic and makes you retarded. until the epstein files everyone was still bending over to enable that reality too for some reason, they probably just didn't have the rhetorical tools to do it. But now they're okay with saying that it's fake and gay. there isn't even a smoking gun, it's just a deluge of shit that validates every retarded conspiracy you've heard in passing over the last 15 years that Journalists had a perfectly reasonable explanation for. It's just.. it's over. It's done. The future for these people is fighting for scraps of ad revenue on twitter
 
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All I know is it's been funny watching the PizzaGate/Epstein Files about-face from so many people over the last few years.
i was basically 100% confident that pizzagate was just a gay pedophile taking heat for the DNC's drug problem and that epstein was just a useless fall guy, but come to find out there's really a sense of humor to occam's razor
 
I;m sure he would love it if the Epstein files were only shared to "trusted journalistic institutions" who would decide what to share with the public.
 
so long as retards crave comfortable lies and validation from the people inside their computer screen, there will always be a place for the lugenjourno
yeah but now they're stuck influencing the internet instead of their gay shit being the de-facto backdrop for real life. they've been trapped in the crystal nigga
 
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