The Vault: The Epstein Files

Redact and Deny: How the DOJ Is Still Hiding the Truth About Jeffrey Epstein (3/2/26)

Mar 2, 2026
The show digs into the DOJ’s widespread and inconsistent redactions in the Epstein file release. It highlights how names of known figures and federal employees were blacked out, obstructing accountability. It argues that excessive secrecy looks like institutional self-protection, not legal caution. It calls for enforcement of transparency laws and public pressure to reveal the full record.
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INSIGHT

DOJ Redactions Exceed Statutory Limits

  • Congress limited redactions to protecting survivors and ongoing investigations, but the DOJ applied broader blackouts that exceed that statutory scope.
  • Bobby Capucci points out names of federal employees and known co-conspirators were obscured despite being publicly known elsewhere in the record.
INSIGHT

Inconsistent Redactions Undermine Credibility

  • Redactions were applied inconsistently: identical documents sometimes redact comparable names in one place and leave them unredacted in another.
  • Capucci argues that inconsistent application undermines any claim the redactions are narrowly tailored for safety or investigations.
INSIGHT

Redacting Already Public Names Obstructs Accountability

  • Many redacted names were already public via indictments, testimony, and reporting, so redactions do not protect anyone and instead obstruct understanding.
  • This fractures the narrative and prevents accountability mapping readers need to evaluate the case.
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