The Deep State's protection racket just got blown wide open. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) took to the House floor to expose six "wealthy, powerful" men whose names the Department of Justice deliberately redacted from the publicly released Epstein files - hiding them "for no apparent reason."
Working alongside Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), the bipartisan sponsors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act made a Monday pilgrimage to the DOJ to review the unredacted documents. What they found should outrage every American who believes in equal justice under the law.
While the DOJ brass was busy playing favorites with their black marker, these lawmakers decided the American people deserved the truth. Khanna's floor speech essentially told the Biden-era Justice Department: if you won't do your job, we will.
"These names were hidden for no apparent reason," Khanna declared, before proceeding to read all six names into the congressional record.
This bombshell revelation raises serious questions about what else the administrative state has been hiding from We the People. How many other connected elites have benefited from DOJ protection? How deep does this cover-up go?
Trump Administration Must Investigate
With Attorney General Pam Bondi now leading the Justice Department, Americans finally have hope that the two-tiered justice system will be dismantled. The Trump administration has already shown its commitment to transparency and draining the swamp - this Epstein file scandal should be Exhibit A for why the Deep State cleanup was so desperately needed.
Patriots have long suspected that the Epstein case was about more than one sick individual - it was about a network of powerful people who thought their wealth and connections put them above the law. The previous DOJ's redaction games only confirmed those suspicions.
Thanks to Khanna and Massie's courage, the truth is finally coming to light. But this is just the beginning. How many more secrets is the administrative state hiding? And what will the Trump administration do to ensure this never happens again?
