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The Special Counsel Moment: Why the Epstein Files Demand Independence (2/13/26)
Published 14 hours ago
Description
The unfolding failure to fully release and comply with the law surrounding the Jeffrey Epstein files has exposed a deeper institutional problem inside the Department of Justice and the Administration. Congress passed a transparency measure through extraordinary means, it became law, and a clear deadline was set. That deadline was missed, and even after partial production, significant questions remain about withheld documents, redactions, and the true scope of what has not been released. When an agency effectively grades its own compliance in a matter involving powerful elites, political exposure, and decades of institutional embarrassment, public trust collapses. The issue is no longer simply about Epstein’s crimes, but about whether the government can credibly investigate and disclose information that may implicate influential figures or reveal internal failures.
Because DOJ leadership operates within the same political structure potentially affected by the fallout, an independent special counsel is the only mechanism capable of restoring legitimacy. A special counsel would have the authority to audit compliance, compel production, investigate obstruction, examine redaction decisions, and pursue any broader criminal enterprise or facilitation network that remains unaddressed. This would shift the process from managed transparency to enforceable accountability, protecting both victims and the integrity of the investigation. Without structural independence, every delay, redaction, or narrowed scope will appear self-protective. Appointing a special counsel is not about politics; it is about ensuring that the law is enforced impartially and that no institution is allowed to police itself in a case of this magnitude.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
Because DOJ leadership operates within the same political structure potentially affected by the fallout, an independent special counsel is the only mechanism capable of restoring legitimacy. A special counsel would have the authority to audit compliance, compel production, investigate obstruction, examine redaction decisions, and pursue any broader criminal enterprise or facilitation network that remains unaddressed. This would shift the process from managed transparency to enforceable accountability, protecting both victims and the integrity of the investigation. Without structural independence, every delay, redaction, or narrowed scope will appear self-protective. Appointing a special counsel is not about politics; it is about ensuring that the law is enforced impartially and that no institution is allowed to police itself in a case of this magnitude.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com