Epstein Case Sparks New Criticism From Rep. Thomas Massie
February 27, 2026
Rep. Thomas Massie says the Department of Justice is sitting on millions of Epstein-related documents — yet no powerful figures have been prosecuted.
He questioned why the case seems to have stopped at one man, despite evidence suggesting a broader network of associates, facilitators, and clients.
Massie is demanding transparency:
Who is in the files?
Who was protected?
And why has no elite name faced charges?
If there are 3 million files, what are they hiding?
The American people deserve answers. Not redactions. Not delays. Not silence.
@uselesscops
#EpsteinFiles #usa #fyp #Congress #transparencyact
English Script:
Thomas Massie: Congress created the Department of Justice. Congress funds the Department of Justice. And Congress is responsible for the oversight of the Department of Justice. When will we see justice? I’ll tell you what I’ve not seen. I’ve not seen any arrests from the revelations in the Epstein files. Over 3 million documents describing horrible things, describing unspeakable things. So much of it redacted. Over two dozen people have resigned. CEOs, members of government worldwide. But I haven’t seen any arrests or investigations here in the United States from this Department of Justice. Prince Andrew, Duke of York, who has since been stripped of his royalty, his royal titles, due to his affiliation with Jeffrey Epstein, has been arrested. Peter Mandelson, who previously served as UK’s ambassador to the United States, resigned in disgrace from the United Kingdom’s House of Lords and the Labor Party. And he’s been arrested. Former Prime Minister of Norway Thorbjørn Jagland has been charged, but we don’t see any charges, arrests or investigations in the United States. What do we see? We see our FBI director celebrating in the locker room at the Olympics overseas. It’s fine to be proud of this country, but we should be proud of this country because we have a system of justice that works. And yet we do not. Who are the men that should be investigated? I’ll name them right here. Leon Black, you don’t even have to see past the redactions to see that this man needs to be investigated. Jess Staley, accused of terrible things. It’s right there in the files. Why is he not being investigated? And Leslie Wexner, why did the FBI list him as a coconspirator in their own documents in a child sex trafficking case, and then tell him, according to him, that they had no questions for him? Why is that? Well, the Epstein Files Transparency Act requires the DOJ and the FBI to disclose to us their internal memos and emails about how they made those decisions, whether to prosecute or not prosecute. Yet they have not delivered those memos. And we still don’t have the memos and documents and emails from 2008 to explain why Jeffrey Epstein was given such a light sentence and what would have been an open and shut case of child sex trafficking, which allowed him to go back and recommit these terrible crimes, create hundreds of more victims.


