Monday, July 21, 2025

The Epstein Files: "The Log Exists"

 



Allison Gill, the legal analyst who posts as Mueller She Wrote, has been doing excellent work on uncovering information about the FBI's review of the Epstein files, which apparently involved roughly 1,000 agents reviewing the files.  She reached out on her BlueSky account to any of these agent willing to anonymously share what they did.  Some key findings:

"At first, the analysts were told to mark nothing. This was roundly rejected by the analysts, who were then told to not think about it as releasing the information - including victims names - to the public, but to think about it as releasing it to the Attorney General. It was assumed that Bondi and Patel wanted all the information, including the victim’s names and information. Analysts were told that what would be released would be solely up to Pam Bondi. Many feared that the victim’s information would be released or used for nefarious purposes. Eventually, lawyers from the Department of Justice were assigned to the project to oversee what was being flagged for redaction.

That changed pretty quickly and the analysts were next told to mark the victim’s names for redaction. Then soon after that, they were told to mark all other Personal Identifiable Information (PII) such as social security numbers and addresses. Then they were told to mark all descriptions of illicit acts for redaction. Then finally, they were instructed to keep a spreadsheet of instances when Trump was mentioned. After the spreadsheets of mentions of Trump were handed in, they were stitched together in one master list. I was not able to learn how many mentions of Donald Trump were on that master list.

As far as content, there was one confirmed mention of Donald Trump in the files reviewed by an analyst who again spoke on the condition of anonymity. Beyond that, there were other instances of Trump appearing in the files, but the number of times and to what extent is unknown.

But the log exists."  (our emphasis)

That log is something the Malignant Fascist and his enablers at the DOJ never want to make public, for the obvious reason that the MF's part of them.  Otherwise, they wouldn't be calling the files a "hoax" and telling their cult to move on.  It's also noteworthy that the first instinct of the corrupt duo of AG Pam "Blondie" Bondi and FBI head Kash "No Checks" Patel was to save the names of the victims, rather than protect them and redact that information.  Their thought was likely to get to the witnesses with some "inducement" for them to decline to come forward against their cult leader.  "But the log exists" would be the key to the MF's involvement and potential criminality.  Stay tuned.

 

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