On the Necessity of Epstein Justice
Epstein Justice is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization whose primary objective is the formation of a Congressional Commission that ensures that all the perpetrators in the Jeffrey Epstein case are prosecuted. Unfortunately, the Epstein case has commingled with fanciful speculation and various agendas, but the crux of the problem is that child sex trafficking has been covered up by government malfeasance and media malfeasance. The government malfeasance has been flagrant, because the Justice Department is absolutely aware of various pimps and perpetrators in the Epstein child trafficking network. The media malfeasance hasn’t been as flagrant, because the media has excelled at propagating salacious dirt, but I’m not aware of one major media out that has called for justice in the Epstein case.
The absolute import of the Epstein case will become obvious if various trends in the United States are superimposed.
Epstein trafficked underage girls for 25 years, and his child trafficking epitomizes a pandemic in the US. According to the Centers for Disease Control, 25% of underage girls and 5% of underage boys in the US experience child sexual abuse, which translates into more than 50 million Americans.
In addition to the CDC’s staggering statistics about the number of Americans who have been molested as minors, the Department of Health and Human Services estimates that the number of sex trafficked children and women in the US is between 240,000 and 325,000 every year. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, only 523 individuals nationwide were convicted of child sex trafficking in 2023. And although millions of images of child rape material infest the internet, according to the US Sentencing Commission only 1,408 individuals in the US were convicted of crimes entailing child rape material in 2023.
As these numbers demonstrate, only a infinitesimal fraction of sexual abuse victims in the US actually see justice. Moreover, if we allow the Justice Department to be unresponsive to victims in the Epstein case, a proven child sex trafficking case, we send a message to millions of victims who have been molested as minors that they have no voice and no hope for justice. As US citizens, we have to ask ourselves a relatively straightforward question: Are we compatible with sending this message to millions of our fellow Americans who have been molested with impunity? If you’re compatible with sending this message to our fellow Americans, then there is no need for you to act. However, if you’re not compatible with sending this message to the millions of Americans who have been molested with impunity, then you need to act.
The objective of Epstein Justice is the formation Congressional Commission that will independently investigate the Epstein case, ensuring that the pimps and perpetrators in the Epstein child trafficking network will be prosecuted. The formation of a Congressional Commission will be achieved by a majority in the House and Senate voting for the Commission.
Many Americans will default to the dilemma that WE THE PEOPLE are powerless. But we seem to have forgotten that our government is beholden to WE THE PEOPLE before WE THE PEOPLE are beholden to our government.
Our objective of a Congressional Commission will be actualized by three primary methods:
· We are currently holding Virtual Training Sessions to teach people how to “pressure” members of Congress, so they form a Commission to address the injustices in the Epstein case.
· We will hold all 535 federal legislators accountable for the formation of a Congressional Commission. On our website, we presently have the software that allows people to send form letters to their Congressional representatives. Within the next month, our website will show which federal legislators are behind the formation of a Commission and the federal legislators who are uncommitted. The latter group will then be the focus of our email campaign and also the urging of their constituents.
· We will have a nonviolent Epstein Justice march and rally in Washington, DC that will put additional pressure on federal legislators to form a Congressional Commission.
The Justice Department allocated $90 million to combat all types of human trafficking in fiscal year 2023. In 2024, an estimated 9,620 cases of pediatric cancer were diagnosed among children between the ages of birth to 14 years old. In fiscal year 2025, the National Institutes of Health will allocate about $272 million for pediatric cancer. Clearly, childhood cancer is a horrific issue that needs our attention, but children who are being trafficked and molested with impunity in the US have been given short shrift for decades.
Our society has to address the needs of these children and citizens, and the Epstein case is a salient and egregious illustration of the government abrogating its responsibilities to protect our society’s most vulnerable population. Epstein Justice will be a superlative and tangible start to correct an odious trend.