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FBI Director Promises Transparency in Epstein Case Amid Calls for Justice

Megyn Kelly’s sit-down with FBI Director Kash Patel is exactly the kind of accountability moment Americans demanded when they voted to drain the swamp. Patel — now leading the Bureau — made it plain that the public deserves the full story on Jeffrey Epstein and that the days of cover-ups are supposed to be over. The mere fact that the FBI director is sitting down with conservative media to explain progress is a welcome change after years of secrecy.

This week’s legal developments underscore that change: a federal judge has ordered grand jury materials tied to the Epstein investigations to be unsealed after Congress pushed for transparency and President Trump signed legislation demanding disclosure. Patriotic citizens who have long asked why powerful people were protected will finally see some light shed on the files in short order. The announcement should be the end of endless delay and the beginning of real answers for victims and the public.

Still, conservatives shouldn’t soften their guard. The initial “phase one” packet released by Pam Bondi’s office contained little new substance, and Kash Patel has publicly pushed the FBI to produce the rest of the records in a usable form rather than let them rot in redacted piles. That pressure is necessary because too many in the past treated important investigations as political ammunition or office files to be buried. If Patel means what he says about transparency, the Bureau will deliver the documents intact and Americans will finally see whether the elite protection racket was real.

At the same time the country debates Epstein’s network, we cannot forget the domestic menace we narrowly escaped last year when Thomas Crooks opened fire at a Trump rally. The shooter grazed the former president’s ear, killed an attendee, and was neutralized within seconds by trained agents — proof that law enforcement on the ground acted with courage when it counted. There is no excuse for political violence, and anyone who cheered or justified such an attack should be condemned by every civilized person.

The FBI’s later conclusion that Crooks’ motive could not be definitively determined should not be used as an excuse to ignore systemic failures or to let the media absolve itself for the rage it has stoked. Even if investigators closed the case without a clear motive, Americans are right to ask how a young man with explosive materials got so close, and why signals were missed. Leadership changes at the Bureau and tougher coordination between agencies are not political vendettas — they are common-sense steps to keep voters, candidates, and bystanders safe.

There are also legitimate concerns about the handling of the Epstein files themselves, including fresh allegations that records might have been tampered with or selectively released — claims members of Congress are now demanding answers about. If anyone in the federal government has been playing games with victim names or shielding powerful figures, those people must be exposed and prosecuted, no matter their party or pedigree. Patriotic Americans expect the full unvarnished truth, not carefully curated leaks that protect the insiders.

This isn’t about settling scores; it’s about restoring the rule of law and the dignity of real victims who deserve justice. Director Patel and Attorney General Bondi have a chance to deliver a historic moment of accountability — to rip off the Band-Aid the swamp has been hiding behind for decades. Hardworking Americans should watch closely, demand that every file be released unredacted when possible, and hold leaders to account if they try to bury the truth again.

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