The Art of Strategic Transparency
When the Epstein files are released without enforcement, compliance becomes theater, redactions are weapons, and the truth depends entirely on who controls the scissors—and what transparency means.
Guest article by Michael Cohen. Remember to follow him on Substack for more by clicking here. Michael just hit 500,000 subscribers on YouTube! Subscribe today for free here and let’s keep the momentum going!
I’ve spent a good chunk of my life watching lawyers promise compliance while quietly planning creative ways not to deliver it. So when the Department of Justice says it will “comply” with the law by today, forgive me if I don’t feel reassured. I feel… nostalgic.
Because in Trumpworld, comply has never meant obey. It means run out the clock, redact aggressively, and dare anyone to stop you.
By actual statute—passed by Congress with near-unanimous support and signed by President Trump himself—the DOJ is required to release all unclassified records related to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell by today. Not some. Not a teaser trailer. Not the “nothing-to-see-here” edition. All of it. FBI files. DOJ deliberations. Charging decisions. Networks. Names. The stuff powerful people hope never sees daylight.
The law even spells it out for the slow readers in the back: documents cannot be withheld due to embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity.
Which immediately leads to the only question that matters:
How do you know what you don’t know?
Short answer: you don’t—especially when the same institution accused of secrecy is also the sole referee deciding what counts as transparency.
Behind the curtain, the Justice Department is not projecting confidence. According to reporting from CNN, frustration inside DOJ is boiling over as lawyers scramble to redact thousands upon thousands of pages before the deadline hits. Some attorneys are responsible for reviewing more than 1,000 documents each, working nonstop since Thanksgiving. Counterintelligence specialists—yes, actual counterintelligence—were yanked off their normal duties and told to redact Epstein files. Some refused. Others are guessing.
Why guessing? Because they’ve been handed four pages of internal guidance. Four. Pages. And most of that guidance explains how to withhold information—not how to release it under a transparency mandate.
So let’s recap the operation: hundreds of gigabytes of material, duplicate documents left in the pile, no consistent redaction standards, lawyers unfamiliar with Epstein’s investigation, minimal direction, and a deadline with no enforcement mechanism if—or dare I say, when—the DOJ blows it.
If this were a Netflix series, critics would say the plot is too unrealistic.
Legal experts are already bracing for what comes next: excessive redactions, accidental disclosures, or conveniently missing documents. And history suggests that concern is justified. Earlier this year, DOJ’s National Security Division botched another rushed document release, accidentally exposing Social Security numbers and private data of hundreds of people.
So yes, DOJ is under pressure. But pressure doesn’t equal accountability.
Representative Thomas Massie offered the clearest test imaginable. Victims’ attorneys say the FBI possesses at least twenty names of men accused of sex crimes. If Friday’s so-called “massive release” doesn’t include a single accused male, congratulations—you’ve just identified a shell game.
And let’s not ignore the political whiplash. Trump once promised to release the Epstein files to expose a shadowy cabal protected by the government. Now, he’s urging DOJ to investigate Democrats and financial institutions mentioned in Epstein’s communications. Transparency has become a sniper rifle—aimed selectively, fired politically.
Legitimate redactions matter. Victims must be protected. Explicit material should never be released. That’s not the debate. The problem is that phrases like national security, foreign policy, and ongoing investigation have become magic cloaks—capable of hiding anything and everything under this administration.
Even the law’s reporting requirement—where the attorney general must list what categories were released or withheld and name politically exposed persons referenced—depends entirely on DOJ’s honesty. It’s transparency by self-attestation. Like asking someone to audit their own offshore accounts.
And once again, the people who matter most—the survivors—are left in the dark. No outreach. No explanation. Their trauma repurposed as political ammunition in a fight they never asked for.
One accuser put it plainly: this is not about party or power. It’s about children. It’s about abuse. It’s about accountability.
So when the drop today arrives, expect theater. Expect a document dump heavy on volume and light on substance. Expect officials to congratulate themselves for “historic transparency” while critics argue over what’s visible—because no one can prove what isn’t.
That’s the trick. That’s the con.
Transparency without enforcement isn’t justice. It’s a press release.
And under this administration, comply doesn’t mean follow the law. It means trust us.
And if my years inside Trump’s orbit taught me anything, it’s this: trust is the first thing they demand—and the last thing they ever deserve.
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Michelle Obama (2018, 2025): “Democracy continues with or without you. [D]emocracy doesn’t wait for you to be bothered. It moves on as it rightly should and therefore the people who vote determine the direction of the country, determine the mood, the tone, and the people who stay out don’t get a say.” https://tinyurl.com/4y49xevr
Barack Obama (2025): “Our democracy is not self-executing. It depends on us all as citizens, regardless of our political affiliations, to stand up and fight for the core values that have made this country the envy of the world.” https://tinyurl.com/3xp9knzt
Barack Obama, Keynote Address at the [July 27,] 2004 Democratic National Convention Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/277378 [Worth reading (or watching) in its entirety to recall who we were just 21 years ago, and will be again once we pass beyond this and them]
“That is the true genius of America, a faith in the simple dreams of its people, the insistence on small miracles. That we can tuck in our children at night and know they are fed and clothed and safe from harm. That we can say what we think, write what we think, without hearing a sudden knock on the door. That we can have an idea and start our own business without paying a bribe or hiring somebody's son. That we can participate in the political process without fear of retribution, and that our votes will be counted - or at least, most of the time.
It's that fundamental belief - I am my brother's keeper, I am my sister's keeper - that makes this country work. It's what allows us to pursue our individual dreams, yet still come together as a single American family. "E pluribus unum." Out of many, one. We are one people, all of us pledging allegiance to the stars and stripes, all of us defending the United States of America.
In the end, that is God's greatest gift to us, the bedrock of this nation; the belief in things not seen; the belief that there are better days ahead. I believe we can give our middle class relief and provide working families with a road to opportunity. I believe we can provide jobs to the jobless, homes to the homeless, and reclaim young people in cities across America from violence and despair. I believe that as we stand on the crossroads of history, we can make the right choices, and meet the challenges that face us. America!”
MUST IMPEACH BONDI AND ALL OTHERS COMPLICIT