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Congressmen Call on DOJ to Un-Redact Bombshells About 9-Year-Old Epstein Victim and “Senior Government Official”

(Based Underground)—The veil over Jeffrey Epstein’s web of exploitation is lifting, but not without resistance. Newly released documents from the U.S. Department of Justice, totaling over three million pages, have laid bare allegations of a nine-year-old victim and Epstein’s associations with a high-ranking foreign government official still in power.

Lawmakers from both parties, after viewing unredacted versions, described the contents as “preposterous and scandalous,” fueling demands for full transparency in a case that continues to implicate the world’s elite. This release, mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed by President Donald Trump, arrives amid heavy redactions that critics say protect perpetrators more than victims.

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The documents stem from federal investigations into Epstein, the financier who died in custody in 2019 while facing sex trafficking charges, and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, currently serving a prison sentence for her role in the scheme. Released late last month, the files include emails, interviews, court records, and seized media—over 180,000 images and 2,000 videos. Yet, much remains obscured.

Representative Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat who reviewed the unredacted materials, highlighted the youth of the victims: “You read through these files, and you read about 15-year-old girls, 14-year-old girls, 10-year-old girls. I saw a mention of a 9-year-old girl today. I mean, this is just preposterous and scandalous.”

Such revelations underscore the depravity at the heart of Epstein’s operation, where minors were groomed and abused under the guise of massages and recruitment.

Bipartisan frustration boils over the redactions, which lawmakers argue shield at least six men potentially incriminated in the scandal. Kentucky Republican Representative Thomas Massie, a key architect of the transparency law alongside California Democrat Ro Khanna, pointed to one redacted figure as “pretty high up in a foreign government.”

Massie urged the Trump administration’s Justice Department to “correct their mistakes” and unmask those protected. The files, he shared publicly in a redacted form, include 18 blacked-out sections, four of which pertain to men born before 1970. This opacity has sparked speculation about who benefits from the secrecy, with patterns suggesting a transatlantic network of influence that reaches into politics, business, and royalty.

Ghislaine Maxwell’s recent appearance before Congress amplified the sense of unfinished justice. In a closed-door hearing on Monday, Maxwell invoked her Fifth Amendment rights repeatedly, refusing to address questions about Epstein’s activities or her involvement. This stonewalling comes as survivors and advocates decry the Justice Department’s handling of the release, which initially included unredacted victim information and even nude photos of young women—prompting swift takedowns and legal complaints.

Lawyers for Epstein’s victims, including Sigrid McCawley, assert that the operation extended beyond Epstein and Maxwell: “It is without question that a significant piece of Epstein and Maxwell’s vast sex-trafficking operation was to provide young women and girls to other wealthy and powerful individuals.”

The British monarchy finds itself particularly ensnared. Khanna warned that the disclosures represent “the most vulnerable the British monarchy has ever been,” potentially exposing a “broader transatlantic elite class.” Prince Andrew, stripped of his titles but still a figure of controversy, features prominently in emails showing ongoing correspondence with Epstein even after the financier’s 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution from a minor.

Peter Mandelson, a former UK ambassador, is also referenced in connections to this elite circle. Khanna called on King Charles III to break his silence: “He has a responsibility to address what he knew.” Meanwhile, Prince William and Princess Catherine issued a statement expressing deep concern for the victims, as the royal family distances itself from the fallout.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick faces mounting bipartisan pressure to resign following revelations of his continued interactions with Epstein, including plans for a visit to the infamous Little St. James island years after initial scandals surfaced.

This adds to a growing list of powerful figures touched by the files, including mentions of President Trump. This has been a sticking point for “Blue Anon” leftist provocateurs but the documents show routine references in news clippings and gossip, without direct allegations of wrongdoing.

Observable patterns in the files point to a system designed for impunity. Draft indictments from 2007 detail Epstein’s threats to victims, such as telling a 16-year-old that “bad things could happen” if she spoke out. Other documents allege passports were confiscated and girls coerced into repeated visits.

FBI conclusions from the era claimed no broader trafficking ring for powerful men, but newly released materials contradict this, with allegations that Epstein supplied victims to others. Attorneys for survivors argue this warrants fresh investigations, challenging official denials that no evidence exists for third-party prosecutions.

The push for accountability persists. Massie has crowdsourced public input on which redactions to challenge, signaling potential congressional action to expose names if the Justice Department falters. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche defended the release as comprehensive, noting withholdings to protect victims and avoid child sexual abuse material.

Yet, with millions of pages still under review, the story unfolds as a testament to delayed justice. Epstein’s victims, some as young as nine according to lawmakers’ accounts, deserve nothing less than the full truth—unredacted and unflinching.

This saga reminds us that power often corrupts in shadows. As more details emerge, the moral imperative is clear: no title, no wealth, no border should shield those who prey on the innocent. The Epstein files are not just records; they are a reckoning for a class that has evaded it for too long.