Another Jeffrey Epstein document dump is coming from the Department of Justice very soon. No matter what comes out, the pundits are convinced that nobody will believe things still aren’t being covered up. Sometimes, you can put a few facts together and take a good guess as to which way it’s leading. Nervous Democrats in the network media are filling in gaps to warn we’ll all be disappointed, once again. The same facts also suggest that the opposite could happen. Things are definitely being “redacted” but until we see what they are it’s a Schrodinger’s box. Both good and bad before it’s opened.
Epstein file censorship
Beginning with the facts, FBI agents are currently “working around the clock” to prep more Epstein files for public release. “Some in 12-hour overnight shifts.” They’re being locked in Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility cubicles with a box of industrial grade black magic markers.
“There will be no withholdings or limitations to my or your access. The Department of Justice will ensure any public disclosure of these files will be done in a manner to protect the privacy of victims and in accordance with law, as I have done my entire career as prosecutor,” Bondi wrote in her order to FBI director Kash Patel.
The “frenzied mission” Attorney General Pam Bondi tasked them with “isn’t an impending national security threat, but instead reviewing documents and other evidence in the investigation of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.”
They’re being whipped like rented mules “to make redactions before the Justice Department releases them publicly.”
Just because the DOJ properly ordered the censorship of certain private information doesn’t mean that any identities are being shielded. In the first Epstein dump, on the contact list files, the names were disclosed while numbers and addresses hidden.
The full unredacted version is still available on the internet but even if it wasn’t there’s no need to know the phone number for George Soros. He changed it long ago.

Agents shanghaied by Bondi
The Attorney General ordered “every division in the bureau” to conscript a few volunteers “to the cause, including those who work on criminal and national security matters.” They have a chance to earn some overtime pay while less enthusiastic staffers have already been fired.
There are still a few friends of Epstein leaking from the DOJ. “This weekend, agents in the Washington field office are spending hours on redaction duty, people briefed on the matter say.”
The DOJ issued a formal statement. “Under Attorney General Bondi’s leadership, the Department of Justice is working relentlessly to deliver unprecedented transparency for the American people.”

The Epstein coverup controversy started when agents were spotted by the press “filing into a room at FBI headquarters.”
Affiliates in New York City soon noticed they were also doing the same thing at the field office there. The surprising news is that there is an Epstein redaction team running full tilt in Chantilly, Virginia.
Apparently, they aren’t stuck sniffing magic marker fumes. “For hours, agents sit at banks of computers, using editing software to identify redactions required under federal laws, including the Privacy Act.” We know that at least some of the Epstein material “includes video.“