For years, the truth has been choked off. Powerful men hide behind sealed files, secret courts, and a system that always seems to “lose” the most damning evidence. Now Alan Dershowitz says he knows who was on Jeffrey Epstein’s client list — and why they’re still protected. Judges. Memos. Broken promises. A dead survivor. A nation left wondering wh… Continues…
Alan Dershowitz’s admission that he knows the names on Epstein’s secret client list — and that a judge’s confidentiality order keeps him silent — is more than a legal technicality. It’s a window into how power really works. The same system that claims to protect victims is, in his telling, shielding the very people who enabled Epstein’s abuse. A judge’s pen becomes stronger than any survivor’s testimony.
The Biden administration’s retreat from fully declassifying Epstein files, wrapped in a bland DOJ memo that insists there’s “nothing more to see,” only deepens public suspicion. Virginia Giuffre’s suicide underscores the human cost of delay, denial, and deflection. Her death is not just a tragedy; it is an indictment. As attorney Sigrid McCawley warned, Epstein didn’t act alone — and until his lawyers, accountants, and protectors face real consequences, the case is not closed. It’s suppressed.