Top Epstein Historian Blows the Whistle
Under massive pressure from his MAGA base, President Donald Trump ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to release grand jury testimony regarding the Epstein case. For a whole bunch of reasons, don’t expect anything of substance to come out of this order. It’s a smokescreen to try and mollify MAGA without letting the real truth come out. I doubt that the order is even legal.
Another example of the government coverup of the Epstein case is that House Speaker Mike Johnson shut down the House early this week for its August recess in order to avert growing pressure inside Congress (from both parties) to release the Epstein files.
House Republicans have virtually stopped work on all major legislation leading up to their six-week summer recess to avoid taking votes on forcing the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Furthermore, it is reported that Bondi told Trump this spring that he was named in the Epstein files along with other high-profile figures.
There is probably no one who has done more investigative research into the Epstein case than historian Ryan Dawson. He recently sat down with Judge Andrew Napolitano for an interview regarding the matter. I think it’s very important for readers to read a transcript of this bombshell interview.
Here are excerpts of that interview:
Judge Andrew Napolitano: Give us the big picture here before we get into the latest raging dispute over here in the states about the Justice Department’s absurd contention that the client list doesn’t exist. Give us the big picture. Who was Epstein? How did he make his money? And what went on on that island?
Ryan Dawson: Well, it’s “islands” plural, actually. So, a lot of people, they know about Little St. Jeffries. He also bought Greater St. Jeffries. And so that is, every time I hear “the island,” people need to understand that the activity that went on on those islands also happened in Florida and New York and New Mexico and Ohio and in Paris. He had properties all over the place. And the pedophilia and other acts and trafficking happened in all those locations. And that started long before he had his islands. It also happened on St. Thomas. He had an office in St. Thomas, and he had half the government there working for him.
Judge Nap: Wow. What was his source of wealth? How is it that he had a home in Paris and New York City and that he owned, literally owned, these islands?
Dawson: In the beginning it was mostly Les Wexner. I can give you a background on him too. Les Wexner. I mean, sweetheart deal aside, you can still boycott Victoria’s Secret. You can boycott Seagram’s liquor. You can at least avoid the products of the people involved in this. Plus, they’re prominent Zionists that support genocide and shooting babies anyway. So, that’s enough reason, in league with Jeffrey Epstein.
He got a lot of money principally from I’d say his top three, well, obviously Wexner and Bronfman and then Leon Black and then Glenn Dubin. That was his principal financing. And then a lot of it he got illegally. And his companies he was able to get huge tax breaks for. For example, in the Virgin Islands, $300 million in tax breaks simply by bribing or blackmailing. We don’t know which one but using his skills to get the legislators to change the rules for him.
Judge Nap: Let’s go to the attorney general. Did she fail to prosecute Epstein and others for crimes committed under her jurisdiction when she was the attorney general of the state of Florida?
Dawson: She did. Well, it’s hard to know how much her arm was twisted. Everybody (except for Donald Jr., I guess) in those clips when they were asked, “What’s important to you?” What did they say? Their relationship with Israel. That’s all they care about.
They probably looked at the list, found out it went back to Israel, and that was it. The list was gone. And
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