EPISODE · May 12, 2026 · 16 MIN
House Investigators Grapple With Sarah Kellen’s Role in Epstein’s Operation (5/12/26)
from The Diddy Diaries · host Bobby Capucci
Members of Congress continue to intensify their investigation into the handling and release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, with lawmakers from both parties increasingly framing the issue around justice for survivors and whether the Department of Justice deliberately narrowed the scope of accountability. The ongoing congressional inquiry has focused heavily on redactions, withheld materials, and the broader question of whether powerful individuals connected to Epstein received institutional protection. Lawmakers including Representatives Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie have publicly accused the DOJ of concealing names and information that they argue should have been disclosed under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Members of the House Oversight Committee have repeatedly argued that survivors were failed not only by Epstein himself, but by the system that allegedly protected associates, minimized allegations, and controlled the release of information.The congressional push has also reignited public anger over the original non-prosecution agreement and the government’s handling of Epstein’s broader network. Lawmakers and survivor advocates have argued that releasing documents means very little without actual accountability for those who allegedly enabled or participated in Epstein’s operation. Several members of Congress have criticized what they describe as a piecemeal and overly managed disclosure process, pointing to continued redactions, missing context, and claims that investigators may have intentionally limited the blast radius surrounding the case. The broader debate unfolding in Washington is no longer just about Jeffrey Epstein as an individual predator, but about whether federal authorities protected a wider ecosystem tied to wealth, influence, and political power while survivors spent years fighting to have their voices taken seriously.to contact me:[email protected]:Victim or co-conspirator? House investigators grapple with the role of Epstein's assistant. - POLITICO
What this episode covers
Members of Congress continue to intensify their investigation into the handling and release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, with lawmakers from both parties increasingly framing the issue around justice for survivors and whether the Department of Justice deliberately narrowed the scope of accountability. The ongoing congressional inquiry has focused heavily on redactions, withheld materials, and the broader question of whether powerful individuals connected to Epstein received institutional protection. Lawmakers including Representatives Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie have publicly accused the DOJ of concealing names and information that they argue should have been disclosed under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Members of the House Oversight Committee have repeatedly argued that survivors were failed not only by Epstein himself, but by the system that allegedly protected associates, minimized allegations, and controlled the release of information.The congressional push has also reignited public anger over the original non-prosecution agreement and the government’s handling of Epstein’s broader network. Lawmakers and survivor advocates have argued that releasing documents means very little without actual accountability for those who allegedly enabled or participated in Epstein’s operation. Several members of Congress have criticized what they describe as a piecemeal and overly managed disclosure process, pointing to continued redactions, missing context, and claims that investigators may have intentionally limited the blast radius surrounding the case. The broader debate unfolding in Washington is no longer just about Jeffrey Epstein as an individual predator, but about whether federal authorities protected a wider ecosystem tied to wealth, influence, and political power while survivors spent years fighting to have their voices taken seriously.to contact me:[email protected]:Victim or co-conspirator? House investigators grapple with the role of Epstein's assistant. - POLITICO
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House Investigators Grapple With Sarah Kellen’s Role in Epstein’s Operation (5/12/26)
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