The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: How Can We Trust Congress When They Won't Even Police Themselves? (3/10/26)

Mar 10, 2026
A blistering look at Congress' performative outrage over Jeffrey Epstein while its own secrecy and hush funds shield lawmakers. Discussion of how donations and access insulated wrongdoing and why taxpayers paid settlements. Calls for disclosure of calendars, donations, and secret payouts. Reviews reform proposals aimed at ending confidentiality and forcing lawmakers to repay settlements.
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INSIGHT

Lawmakers' Outrage Often Follows Optics Not Conscience

  • Bobby Capucci argues many lawmakers performed outrage only after Epstein became a political liability.
  • He contrasts decades of acceptance of Epstein's money and access with sudden, rehearsed denunciations during the scandal's peak.
INSIGHT

Taxpayer Funded Hush Payments Undercut Accountability

  • Capucci highlights a taxpayer-funded congressional harassment fund that pays settlements to silence claims.
  • He frames it as institutional hypocrisy: lawmakers demand accountability externally while protecting themselves with public money.
INSIGHT

1995 Law Designed To Insulate Lawmakers Not Workers

  • The Congressional Accountability Act (1995) created a cumbersome, secretive complaint process that shields lawmakers.
  • Capucci argues provisions like mandatory counseling for accusers and secrecy function to insulate officials, not protect workers.
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