Peloni: Michael Snyder examines what can only be described as incompetence at the minimum, and suspected complicity at the worse, which will forever surround the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein case. As the promise of “all will be revealed” wass meekly replaced with the proposed guarantee that there was nothing relevant to discuss, with the routine attempt to bury this change of concept regarding Epstein, his co-conspirators, the evidence of his guilt and his already divulged connection to the intelligence world, as this drastic change of narrative was made over the July 4 holiday. Indeed, if the claim that celebrated notoriety of the Epstein case was just a fiction, a solemn and thorough disclosure of the facts needed to be produced to the public in such a way as to merit the value already assessed to the charges by both Trump administration officials such as AG Bondi, as well as by the American public in general. Notably, Trump voiced some reluctance about declassifying the Epstein files about a year ago, but Bondi in particular provided a foreboding commentary regarding the importance of the Epstein revelations, already having turned the re-release of previously revealed documents into a media circus. Promises made deserve to be kept, and when expectations fail to materialize, it heightens, rather than eliminates, the need to highlight the change of narrative, and more importantly, a full, rather than dismissive, explanation for why those changes took place.
The repeated mishandling of this case in the hands of the Trump administration will linger in the minds of many in the public as the fair questions raised by Snyder below are weaponized and scrutinized by both political enemies of the administration as well as the curiosity of the general public.
Michael Snyder | July 7, 2025


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