Saturday, June 6, 2026

The Three Words Burying Three Million Epstein Files: Non-Responsive, Privileged, Duplicative

 https://mitchthelawyer.substack.com/p/the-three-words-burying-three-million

~~ recommended by newestbeginning ~~

A trial lawyer reads Pam Bondi's sworn testimony word by word and shows you the coverup hiding in her own statement.


The Excuses Don’t Hold Water

Three million documents about the most notorious child sex trafficking case of our lifetime sit locked inside the Department of Justice right now, hidden from you. One question should keep you up tonight. What are the people at the top so afraid of you seeing?

Pam Bondi handed you the answer. She did not plan to. The transcript of her congressional testimony just went public, and her own careful words hold a confession in plain sight. The Department of Justice reviewed more than six million pages of Epstein records. The Department released about half. The Department holds back the rest, close to three million pages. Bondi told Congress why those records never reached your eyes. Three words. Non-responsive, privileged, or duplicative.

I have practiced law in California for four decades. I have tried more cases in front of juries than most lawyers. I read those three words once. I read them again. Every one of them collapses the moment you hold it against the law Congress wrote and passed.

Let me walk you through it the way I would walk a jury.

What Bondi Admitted Under Oath

Bondi told the committee she did not run the document review herself. She said it out loud. She handed oversight to her deputy, Todd Blanche, and named another senior official as the one primarily responsible for the review and production. Then she repeated the line her team fed her. The only materials the Department held back, in her words, were non-responsive, privileged, or duplicative.

She gave numbers too. The Department pulled more than six million pages and put out about half. The other half stayed in the dark, close to three million pages. When a member asked who decided which documents counted as privileged, Bondi gave a name. Todd Blanche. Then a phrase that should stop you cold. He made those calls, she said, following the law.

Hold onto that name. Todd Blanche made the privilege calls. Todd Blanche ran the oversight. Trump fired Bondi in April. Blanche has run the Justice Department ever since. This week, Trump moved to make Blanche the permanent Attorney General of the United States. The man who oversaw the burial of three million Epstein documents now wants a permanent grip on the top law enforcement office in the country, and he needs the Senate to hand it to him.

So let us test his three reasons against the statute he claims he followed.

What The Law Demands

The Epstein Files Transparency Act became law on November 19, 2025. The text is not vague. The text is not a suggestion. The Attorney General “shall” make publicly available, in a searchable and downloadable format, all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice relating to Jeffrey Epstein. The law gave the Department thirty days to do it.¹

The law then lists what counts. Investigations and prosecutions. Ghislaine Maxwell. Flight logs and travel records. The names of government officials and public figures connected to Epstein. The entities tied to his trafficking and his money. Every immunity deal and plea bargain. And this one, word for word: internal DOJ communications, including emails, memos, meeting notes, concerning decisions to charge, not charge, investigate, or decline to investigate Epstein or his associates.

Read that category twice and burn it into memory. It ends the privilege excuse by itself.

The law also names what it forbids. No record shall be withheld, delayed, or redacted on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure, or foreign dignitary. Plain English. You cannot hide a document because it makes a rich man look bad. You cannot hide a document because it makes the President look bad.

Here is the part that decides this whole fight. The law gives a short, closed list of the only grounds the Attorney General has to hold anything back. Victim identifying information and victim medical files. Child sexual abuse material. Material that would damage a genuinely active investigation, held back narrowly and only for as long as necessary. Images of death, abuse, or injury. Properly classified national security information. That is the entire list. And every redaction, says the law, must come with a written justification published in the Federal Register and delivered to Congress.

Five permitted reasons. Five. Search that list for the word “privileged.” Search again for “duplicative.” You will not find them, because they are not there.

Now watch all three of Bondi’s excuses die.

Reason One: Duplicative

Bondi defined this one herself under questioning. A duplicative document, she said, is the same document released twice. She blamed copies sitting in two United States Attorney offices, one in Florida and one in New York. The Department later argued it over collected on purpose, so the stack of unique pages runs smaller than the raw total.²

Fine. Release the stack and let us count and confirm.

You are an adult. If the government hands you two copies of the same page, you set one aside and move on with your life. A duplicate hurts no one. A duplicate protects no one. A duplicate exposes no victim. The law holds no exception for documents that show up twice, because there is no honest reason to need one. The Department even admitted it kept these so called duplicates in a private reading room for members of Congress, away from the public. Think about what that move tells you. They had the documents ready to hand over. They chose to keep them off your screen. “Duplicative” is not a legal shield. It is a stall dressed up in a lawyer word.

Reason Two: Privileged

This is the excuse that should make every American furious. It is the most lawless of the three.

The law gives the Attorney General five reasons to withhold a record. Privilege is not one of them. Congress wrote a closed list on purpose, and Congress left every privilege off it on purpose. Attorney client privilege, deliberative process privilege, work product, any privilege you have ever heard a lawyer name on television. None of them appear in this statute.

Now read what the Department told Congress in its own report. It admitted, in writing, that it withheld material under deliberative process privilege, work product privilege, and attorney client privilege, and claimed the law permits this. Go back to the closed list. Those privileges are not in it. The Department put in black and white that it used an authority the statute never handed it. A senior member of the committee said the same to Bondi’s face, holding up the law as an exhibit. Nothing in this law allows these privileges. That member called it what it is. A breaking of the law.

Here is the knockout blow, straight from Bondi’s own mouth. Asked for an example of a privileged document, she gave one. A prosecution memo, she said, is privileged.

A prosecution memo.

Really?

Go back to the category I told you to memorize. The law affirmatively orders the release of internal communications about decisions to charge, not charge, investigate, or decline to investigate Epstein and his associates. A prosecution memo is the exact document Congress demanded. The one example Bondi gave for what the Department gets to hide is the thing the law orders it to show you. Her shield is the one thing the statute strips away.

The decision memos about whether to charge Epstein’s enablers. The notes on why investigations stopped. The records of who got a pass and who signed off. Those are the documents at the molten core of this scandal, and “privilege” is the word they use to keep every one of them from you. The law does not permit it. Full stop.

Reason Three: Unrelated

Bondi’s last category was material that, in her telling, had nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein. Call it what it is. Unrelated.

On its face it sounds reasonable. The Department does not owe you paperwork about a parking ticket from another case. The question is who decides what counts as unrelated, and how broadly the law defines related.

The statute reaches everything connected to nine sweeping categories. Epstein himself. Maxwell. The flights. The named officials and public figures. The entities and money networks. The deals. The internal charging decisions. The records about destroyed or concealed evidence. The circumstances of his detention and death. That net is enormous by design, because Congress understood exactly how a guilty agency behaves when it wants to bury something.

So picture the setup. The people sorting six million pages into “related” and “unrelated” stacks work for the same Department whose former and current bosses appear in these files. The President’s name turns up thousands of times across what the Department already released, much of it in old news clippings. And you are asked to trust that those same employees, behind a closed door, fairly decided that millions of pages had “nothing to do with Epstein,” with no judge checking their math and no citizen looking over their shoulder. “Unrelated” became the trash bin where responsive, embarrassing, dangerous documents go to disappear.

In my world we have an independent judge or discovery referee review the documents and tell the parties if something is discoverable or not. One party doesn’t just get to make that decision and be done with it.

The Tell: Who They Shielded And Who They Exposed

If you take one thing from this piece, take this. It turns suspicion into proof.

Members of Congress did something you cannot. They walked into a secure room and read the files with the redactions stripped away. The top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee walked out and said plainly the Department appears to have flouted the law. The public version, he said, hides people who spent time with Epstein for one reason only, to spare them embarrassment, political sensitivity, or disgrace. The law forbids exactly that kind of redaction, in language a first year law student understands. He gave a concrete example. The Department blacked out a passage describing the President and Epstein together at the President’s Florida club, with no legal ground for it.

The names the Department guarded read like a guest list for the connected and the untouchable. A former British prince. A private equity titan. A hedge fund billionaire. A former bank chief. A retail magnate. A famous defense attorney. Members who saw the unredacted files read those names into the record and asked Bondi a simple question. Were any of these men under investigation. She refused to answer. She refused even to name the privilege she was hiding behind. An active investigation is the one narrow reason the statute lets the Department shield a name. The Department would not even say whether that reason applied.

Now look at who the Department did not protect. The victims. Survivors of child sex trafficking saw their own names, their phone numbers, their home addresses, and photographs of themselves as children dumped onto a public website for anyone on earth to download. Lawyers for the survivors say the Department exposed the identities of dozens of people who were abused as kids. Some had never been publicly tied to this case in their lives. Families are getting calls. Survivors are suing the government over it.

Sit with that for a moment as a parent, as a grandparent, as a human being.

The law commands one thing above all. Protect the victims. The law commands another thing above all. Do not shield the connected. The Department did the exact reverse of both. They guarded the men. They sacrificed the children. A mistake runs in one direction. This ran in the only direction that serves the people with the most to lose, and it ran straight through the two clearest commands in the entire statute. That is not incompetence. That is a choice. And a choice that consistent is the fingerprint of a coverup.

The Deadline They Blew And The List That Hides More Than It Tells

The law gave the Department thirty days. On day thirty it released just around four thousand files. Weeks later it dumped a few million pages and announced it was finished. The Department says it raced the clock to protect victims. It exposed the victims anyway, so that excuse died on contact.

The law also requires a report to Congress within fifteen days of completing the release. That report must list every category of records held back, the legal basis for every redaction, and the names of all government officials and politically exposed persons in the files, with no redactions allowed.

The Department did send that report. It sent a list of hundreds of names. Read how they built it and you see the game. They buried the real suspects in a crowd. Dead celebrities. Business figures with no tie to the crimes. People who surface in one old news article. The congressman who wrote the law said it out loud. The Department muddied the waters on purpose, blurring the line between a predator and a name that drifted by in an email. The list exists. The list is built to tell you almost nothing. And the public files still hide names the law says no one is allowed to hide.

Ask yourself a simple question. Why does a Department with nothing to hide work this hard to keep you confused?

This Is Todd Blanche’s Problem Now

Every road in this scandal leads back to one man. Bondi told Congress that Todd Blanche oversaw the handling of these files and personally made the privilege calls that kept documents from you. Todd Blanche is the President’s former personal lawyer, the man who was paid $10,000,000 to defended him in his criminal case in New York. Todd Blanche is the President’s pick to be the next Attorney General. The Senate decides whether he gets the job.

This is the test of the confirmation hearing, and you should demand your senators meet it. Make Blanche point to the exact line in the Epstein Files Transparency Act that lets him withhold a document because it is privileged. He will not find one. Make him point to the line that lets him withhold a document because it is a duplicate. He will not find one. Make him produce the written legal basis the law demands for every redaction. Make him explain why associates got shielded and children got exposed. Make him explain, under oath, why a passage about the President got blacked out with no law behind it.

A man who broke this law in the dark should not be handed the authority to enforce every other law in the light.

Your Move

Here is the truth, lawyer to citizen. The Epstein Files Transparency Act is not complicated. Congress wrote it in plain language and passed it almost without a dissenting vote, because the country, across both parties, demanded the whole truth. The Department of Justice is defying that law right now, holding millions of documents behind a wall of excuses that live nowhere in the statute.

This is the pattern of this administration. Treat the law as an obstacle. Treat the connected as protected. Treat the rest of us as people who will get tired and look away. They are counting on your silence. They are counting on you assuming someone else will handle it.

Do not give them the silence. Your kids and your grandkids will inherit the country we either defend or surrender in moments exactly like this one.

Share this with someone who still mistakenly believes the all the files have been produced. Drop a comment with the one question you want Todd Blanche forced to answer under oath. Then call both of your United States senators and tell them, in your own voice, that no nominee who buried close to three million Epstein documents deserves to be confirmed as Attorney General until every page the law requires sits on the public record.

The law is on your side. The facts are on your side. The only thing missing is your voice. Use it.

Mitch Jackson, Esq.

No comments:

Post a Comment