The Department of Justice says the Jeffrey Epstein case is officially over. According to their final word, he died by suicide, and there was no client list. Nothing to see here, folks.
Unless you ask Pam Bondi.
Here’s a video of Pam Bondi saying the Epstein Client List that we are now being told doesn’t exist was on her desk.
We were or are being lied to.
No other explanation.pic.twitter.com/rn8NhBM2Qy
— C3 (@C_3C_3) July 7, 2025
In a resurfaced video, the former Attorney General calmly stated that the client list was sitting on her desk.
So now we’re left with a problem. Either Bondi imagined a stack of papers that didn’t exist, or the Justice Department is rewriting history with a Sharpie. Neither option inspires much confidence.
Epstein was a convicted predator with ties to politicians, princes, and moguls. Then he died in jail, under circumstances that would make a Hollywood screenwriter blush.
Ghislaine Maxwell, his longtime associate, is serving time for trafficking minors to… no one in particular, apparently. And now the FBI says, sorry, there’s no list. Case closed.
People aren’t crazy for having questions.
The same folks who were told to trust every step of this investigation now find themselves told to forget it ever happened. Not because we got answers, but because they say there aren’t any.
That’s not how trust works. You can’t tell Americans to sit down and shut up while the elite escape scrutiny. It doesn’t go over well.
When Bondi says she had the list, and the DOJ says no list ever existed, it’s reasonable to ask who’s right. More to the point: who’s lying?
The outrage isn’t fueled by fantasy. It’s built on years of watching double standards. From school board meetings labeled as domestic extremism to political investigations that drag on for years, it’s clear who gets the benefit of the doubt in Washington and who doesn’t.
When ordinary people break the law, they go to jail. When rich and powerful people do it, they vanish into foundation boards and beachfront homes. If you’re lucky, maybe they skip a public appearance or two. That’s the extent of their punishment.
And here we are, full circle. The Epstein case is supposed to be finished, wrapped up in a neat little bow of bureaucracy. No client list, no new names, and no more uncomfortable questions. Just a shrug from the top, and a quiet hope we’ll all move on.
Except many won’t.
If there really was nothing there, why did Bondi say otherwise? If there was something, who decided it should stay hidden?
Until those questions are answered plainly, this case won’t feel closed. Not to the people who still believe truth matters.
Even if it’s inconvenient. Even if it rattles the wrong cages.
Especially then.
This article was written with the assistance of AI. Please verify information and consult additional sources as needed.