Elizabeth Baxter and Sean Dunn became symbols long before they became human again. For a brief, blinding moment, they were everything Washington loves to devour: villains or martyrs, depending on the channel, their lives reduced to clips, hashtags, and outraged monologues. When the cameras finally turned away, they were left with the quiet wreckage—lost jobs, strained marriages, friendships that grew suddenly cautious. The city moved on. Their lives did not.
Far from the noise, Operation Grayskull wrote a different kind of story—one that would never trend, yet would define more lives than any viral scandal. Agents spent years wading through depravity, mapping secret networks, listening to victims describe horrors that could never be fully prosecuted. Katsampes went to prison, but no sentence could balance the ledger. In the end, DC’s truth was brutally simple: the most important battles were the ones no one was allowed to see.