
Consider This from NPR The DOJ released the final Epstein files. Where do the survivors go from here?
19 snips
Feb 2, 2026 Annie Farmer, a survivor and advocate who testified about abuse by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, reacts to the DOJ's massive document release. She describes outrage over exposed names and images. She questions redaction errors, raises concerns about investigative gaps and accountability, and discusses how survivors are coping and seeking safety and healing.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Release Without Proper Redactions
- The DOJ released millions of documents but failed to properly redact sensitive victim information.
- That lapse exposed names and nude images, undermining the law's intent and survivors' safety.
Personal Reaction To The Leak
- Annie Farmer describes feeling
Weaponized Incompetence Suspected
- Annie Farmer calls the poor redactions 'weaponized incompetence' and doubts it was accidental.
- She sees selective redaction patterns as potentially intentional discouragement of transparency.
