On his show this week, Newsmax host Greg Kelly warned viewers that the newly released trove of Jeffrey Epstein material contains details most Americans haven’t seen and that too many powerful institutions still aren’t being honest with the public. Kelly’s tone was plainspoken and furious — exactly what patriot-minded Americans deserve when government secrecy meets elite privilege.
House Republicans on the Oversight Committee published a massive batch of records — roughly 33,000 pages — that they say sheds light on Epstein’s operations and the way institutions handled them. The first tranche included court filings, surveillance footage and estate materials that Republicans argue were long overdue for public scrutiny.
Democrats and some media outlets were quick to downplay the release, saying most of the material was already public and that perhaps only a sliver of the pages are truly new; critics estimate as little as 3 percent contains previously unseen information. At the same time, the Justice Department and FBI issued a memo saying their review found no “client list” and no credible evidence Epstein was murdered — an announcement that calmed some but only inflamed others who smell a cover-up.
Americans should be skeptical of any one-off memo meant to close the book on a scandal this big. Metadata and reporting around the jailhouse footage have raised legitimate questions — including discrepancies that suggest minutes of video were not intact — and those inconsistencies deserve real, not performative, investigation. If law enforcement wants the public to trust its conclusions, it should welcome independent verifications, not race to a tidy press release.
This is about two things that should unite every decent American: truth and justice for victims. Conservatives who love this country must demand full transparency, protection for survivors, and a proper accounting of how the powerful were allowed to operate in plain sight. If our institutions cannot be hauled into the light and held accountable, then the idea of equal justice under the law is hollow — and we should refuse to let that stand.

