The Epstein files—a choice between accountability and a spectacle
The Steady State | by John Sipher, as published by Tomorrow's Affairs
The phrase “release the Epstein files” has such rhetorical power because it promises moral clarity. It offers the public a cathartic moment, exposure, accountability, a sense that the powerful can’t hide behind the system.
And in a political culture that increasingly treats outrage as both a pastime and a strategy, it can feel especially satisfying: like we’re sticking it to our opponents and shaking loose a network of predators.
But the pleasure should instead signal a warning light.
The bigger danger in an all-at-once “files” release isn’t that we’ll learn something uncomfortable about famous people. It’s that we’ll further damage the one thing a society cannot function without: credible trust in the rule-of-law process, law enforcement, prosecutors, courts, and the professionalism that makes those institutions something other than weapons.
If our standard for justice becomes “dump everything and let the internet sort it out,” we are not strengthening accountability. We’re degrading it into a spectacle.
The process is the point
We’ve built a serious, rights-protecting system over many decades because we learned, often the hard way, that justice is fragile.
It requires rules. It requires restraint. It requires a chain of custody, evidentiary standards, defense rights, judicial oversight, and accountability mechanisms that are boring precisely because they are meant to be fair.
That system is not perfect. But it’s the only system designed to produce outcomes that can be defended as legitimate rather than simply popular.
Please read here the entire article published by Tomorrow’s Affairs on February 2, 2026
John Sipher ( @johnsipher.bsky.social ) is a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and co-founder of Spycraft Entertainment. He worked for the CIA’s Clandestine Service for 28 years and is the recipient of the Agency’s Distinguished Career Intelligence medal. He is also a host and producer of the "Mission Implausible" podcast, exploring conspiracy theories. He is a member of The Steady State and a host of The Steady State Sentinel Podcast.
Founded in 2016, The Steady State is a nonprofit 501(c)(4) organization of more than 360 former senior national security professionals. Our membership includes former officials from the CIA, FBI, Department of State, Department of Defense, and Department of Homeland Security. Drawing on deep expertise across national security disciplines, including intelligence, diplomacy, military affairs, and law, we advocate for constitutional democracy, the rule of law, and the preservation of America’s national security institutions.



Do you share my dismay with our continued failure to offer justice to victims of Jeffrey Epstein’s pyramid system of sexual abuse of vulnerable children?
Faced with a horrible scandal in the 80’s and 90’s, Belgians poured into the streets in the White March to express their outrage over the crimes and failure of the judicial system and support individuals pursuing justice. Our Epstein scandal provides a unique opportunity to convert public outrage into support for survivors and accountability for offenders and those who looked the other way and allowed them to continue.
I like the idea of a White March because of the simplicity. I believe the people would support rallies at the local, state and national level to hold predators accountable, demand resources to protect sexually abused and trafficked children and remind Congress that we will not let this rest.
According to the documentary 'Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich’ victims fled the United States. Protests at U.S. Embassies overseas would provide them and their supporters an opportunity to express global opposition to this global scandal. International child sex trafficking cannot be successfully combatted without international cooperation to support the rule of law.
OK. Read it. Makes sense if you believe the way it has been is the way it is and always will be. Your logic is based on more of us currently having faith in the institution of law. We do not.
Clearly Trump & Co. does not. The files release is a GOTTCHA for an admin run wild. Seems appropriate to me.
Ya got a better idea on how to stop this guy?
Telling us that getting the files out is dangerous to institutions is kinda “horse already left the barn”. Yeah, the internet will make hash out of them BUT the internet is making Epstein stuff up every second…