I Obtained Jeffrey Epstein's Account Passwords
Stonewalling Public Disclosure Only Fans The Flames Of Discontent
As we enter week three of Epstein fever, prompted by the Department of Justice non-release of documents pertaining to the dead financier’s sex trafficking operation, there are a number of voices screaming directions at the roiling masses demanding answers. Some members of MAGA world have quietly acquiesced to pressure from the Trump administration to “stop talking about Epstein”. They have reverted to a fetal crouch in the face of an enraged commander in chief, telling their viewers to follow the leader and pipe down.
There are also Democrats who have cut a duplicitous if novel tack, introducing dead on arrival legislation to force the department of justice to disclose more documents pertaining to Epstein. These attempts are not serious, but at least message to voters that politicians hear the waves of growing dissatisfaction.
Democrats, themselves implicated by Jeffrey Epstein through his association with figures like Bill “slick willie” Clinton, had long looked down their noses at those who sensed that the Epstein saga was always about more than one man abusing hundreds of girls. They failed to recognize that the obsession with Epstein has to do with a lurking suspicion that normal people feel in their bones, a repressed knowledge that the world is rigged by those whose political distinctions matter less to one another than their respective class backgrounds and towers of accumulated wealth.
Nevertheless, there are faint but real cracks emerging in the long held Democratic consensus, like Senator Ron Wyden breaking the spell of silence imposed on members of congressional intelligence committees. As the New York Times reported last week, Wyden revealed that there are over a billion dollars of suspicious banking transactions tied to Epstein that his committee is investigating but cannot unilaterally release. But whether anything concrete makes it out of Wyden’s office and into to the public realm remains to be seen.
In an effort to demonstrate just how much is out there and how easy it would be to release it, I am publishing the passwords to Jeffrey Epstein’s online accounts. I don’t chair a congressional committee, run the white house, or oversee a powerful law firm. I just write this stack.
These passwords represent the gateway to untold numbers of communications with some of the most powerful people in the world. If I can share these with you, our elected officials can certainly release more documents of note. A word to the wise: it is illegal to access the private accounts of any individual, living or dead.
8001218
ghislaine1
108178307283047
jeevacatio
jeevacat
jeevacation12
daasdfasdf
trd207
ghislaine1
Surprised "1234567" and "password" aren't there
Which ones are for which accounts?