In a classic deep state maneuver, the U.S. Justice Department quietly dumped tens of thousands more pages of Jeffrey Epstein-related documents just two days before Christmas on December 23, 2025, ensuring minimal public scrutiny during the holiday season. This latest tranche, part of ongoing releases under pressure from Congress, included multiple mentions of President Donald Trump—mostly old news clippings, flight log references from the 1990s, and some unsubstantiated tips—but revealed absolutely nothing new or damning about his long-known social acquaintance with the late financier. The timing reeks of deliberate obfuscation, burying potentially explosive material when Americans are focused on family and festivities rather than holding the corrupt establishment accountable.
Despite the hype from legacy media eager to smear Trump, these documents added little revelatory information to the Epstein saga, which has been dragged out for years without exposing the real power players involved in his sex trafficking network. The mentions of Trump largely recycle pre-2020 election hoaxes and sensational claims that have been debunked repeatedly, while conveniently glossing over deeper ties to other elites. No one is paying attention now because the mainstream narrative has moved on, but the real scandal is how these files sat untouched for so long.
The window for true revelations closed five years ago when Biden took over the White House and controlled the DOJ—yet nothing substantial happened then, confirming the entire Epstein “client list” frenzy was nothing but a manufactured hoax designed to distract and divide. If there were real bombshells implicating the swamp’s favorites, they would have been leaked during the 2020 or 2024 campaigns to derail Trump. Instead, this holiday-timed drip proves once again that the system protects its own, and the public deserves better than recycled nonsense.