This episode of The New Sentinel unpacks the newly released Epstein Files and what they reveal about Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes, his vast network of powerful associates, and the failures of law and justice that let him offend for decades. Major Ethan “Sentinel” Graves walks listeners through the core evidence in the files: FBI memos, draft indictments, victim statements, flight logs, and contact books that map an elite social circle spanning presidents, billionaires, academics, and royals. Olga Ivanova brings a human‑rights lens to the redaction fiascos that exposed victims while shielding enablers, the global investigations now opening in Europe and beyond, and the UN panel’s suggestion that Epstein’s operation amounted to crimes against humanity. Together they examine the political storm around the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the Trump administration’s shifting stance on “the client list,” and the limited prosecutions that have followed despite millions of pages of evidence. The conversation ends by asking what real accountability would look like—for traffickers, facilitators, and institutions—and why impunity for the connected remains such a stubborn feature of modern democracies.