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.