The True Crime Tapes

Who Enforces the Enforcers? DOJ’s Epstein Transparency Rebellion (1/20/26)


Listen Later

The Department of Justice has treated the Epstein transparency law like a suggestion, not a mandate, openly slow-walking disclosures, drip-feeding partial releases, and hiding behind bureaucratic excuses while insisting it is somehow in “substantial compliance.” What makes this moment especially brazen is that the law was designed specifically to prevent exactly this kind of stonewalling—years of selective secrecy justified by vague claims of privacy, process, or administrative burden. Instead of honoring the spirit of transparency the statute demands, DOJ leadership has effectively rebranded noncompliance as discretion, acting as though Congress merely asked nicely for records tied to one of the most consequential sex-trafficking cases in modern history. The result is a hollowed-out law that exists on paper but is functionally neutered in practice, with the DOJ deciding unilaterally what the public and lawmakers are “allowed” to see.


Even more alarming is the DOJ’s posture toward Congress itself, which amounts to a quiet but unmistakable assertion that lawmakers have no real power to compel enforcement. Through delays, narrow interpretations, and procedural defiance, the Department has sent a clear message: oversight ends where DOJ inconvenience begins. Rather than treating congressional authority as co-equal and binding, the DOJ has behaved like a sovereign entity policing itself, daring Congress to escalate while betting—correctly so far—that it won’t. This is not just institutional arrogance; it is a constitutional stress test, and the DOJ is openly testing how far it can go without consequence. In doing so, it has transformed the Epstein transparency law into a case study in how executive agencies can undermine legislation without ever formally violating it—by simply refusing to take it seriously and daring anyone to stop them.



to contact me:

[email protected]



source:

DOJ says congressmen seeking Epstein files should butt out of Ghislaine Maxwell case | Courthouse News Service
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The True Crime TapesBy Bobby Capucci

  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4
  • 4.4

4.4

5 ratings


More shows like The True Crime Tapes

View all
In The Dark by The New Yorker

In The Dark

28,182 Listeners

Heavyweight by Pushkin Industries

Heavyweight

17,521 Listeners

Crime Junkie by Audiochuck

Crime Junkie

369,904 Listeners

Police Off The Cuff/Real Crime Stories by Bill Cannon Police off the Cuff/Real Crime Stories

Police Off The Cuff/Real Crime Stories

853 Listeners

The Standard by The Evening Standard

The Standard

21 Listeners

The Binge Cases: Killer Story by Sony Music Entertainment

The Binge Cases: Killer Story

4,404 Listeners

Unraveled by ID

Unraveled

10,531 Listeners

Game of Crimes by Game of Crimes

Game of Crimes

1,461 Listeners

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast by Rhapsody Voices

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast

417 Listeners

The Epstein Chronicles by Bobby Capucci

The Epstein Chronicles

255 Listeners

The Connect- with Johnny Mitchell by Johnny Mitchell

The Connect- with Johnny Mitchell

573 Listeners

Jeffrey Epstein:  The Coverup Chronicles by Bobby Capucci

Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

21 Listeners

Sit Down with Michael Franzese by Michael Franzese

Sit Down with Michael Franzese

88 Listeners

Adrift by Apple TV / Blanchard House

Adrift

845 Listeners