The legacy media spent years telling Americans to “trust the process.” Trust the prosecutors. Trust the Russia investigation. Trust the institutions. But buried inside the Epstein files are claims and details that raise uncomfortable questions about some of the very figures the press elevated as untouchable heroes.
Criminal defense attorney David Schoen sent Jeffrey Epstein an email that is now drawing fresh scrutiny. In it, Schoen reportedly argued that no serious observer would ever take the Russia investigation at face value because Special Counsel Robert Mueller assembled what he called a “murderer’s row of the worst.”
At the center of that allegation was Andrew Weissmann — a frequent New York Times opinion contributor and a near-permanent fixture on MSNBC. Schoen didn’t mince words. He claimed Weissmann was known inside the U.S. Attorney’s Office as “The Pathological Liar,” accusing him of withholding exculpatory evidence — the very kind prosecutors are legally obligated to disclose under Brady rules.
If that allegation were true, it would constitute a Brady violation — one of the most serious forms of prosecutorial misconduct. The New York Times itself has editorialized about the importance of prosecutors disclosing evidence favorable to defendants, lamenting the “near complete lack of punishment” when they don’t. Yet the same paper has celebrated Weissmann as a model prosecutor, even publishing his opinion pieces praising the case against former President Donald Trump.
Schoen claimed Weissmann’s tactics included allegedly hiding key documents and misleading judges into believing defense attorneys already had access to them. He further alleged those practices extended even into murder cases. These are explosive accusations — the kind that would normally dominate headlines. Instead, they’ve barely registered in corporate media circles.
Weissmann also led the federal prosecution of Arthur Andersen during the Enron scandal. That conviction was later unanimously overturned by the Supreme Court due to flawed jury instructions — a rebuke that legal analysts have described as a devastating blow to the prosecution’s handling of the case. Yet coverage of Weissmann’s past rarely emphasizes that reversal.
Schoen didn’t stop there. He characterized other Mueller team members as politically compromised, naming Jeannie Rhee — who previously represented Hillary Clinton in her email investigation — and Greg Andres, described as firmly aligned in the pro-Clinton camp. NBC News once called Mueller’s legal team “the best prosecutors in the business.” Critics argue the Epstein files suggest a far more complicated story.
And then there’s Palm Beach.
While national media have relentlessly targeted former U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta for his later plea deal with Epstein, far less attention has focused on Barry Krischer, the Palm Beach County state attorney who handled the original 2006 investigation.
Krischer, a Democrat, aggressively pursued conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh over painkiller allegations — conducting raids, seizing records, and fueling media coverage before eventually dropping the case. But when Palm Beach police presented what they described as a meticulously documented investigation into Epstein’s alleged sex trafficking of minors, the response was strikingly different.
Instead of pursuing aggressive felony charges, Krischer’s office brought the case before a grand jury that ultimately returned a single count of soliciting prostitution. Epstein was released on bond. No prison term. No significant financial penalty. No ankle monitor.
Court records show that during grand jury proceedings, young victims were questioned about their own behavior — including drug use, alcohol consumption, body piercings, and social media posts. One prosecutor reportedly asked a teen whether she understood she had committed a crime. The optics were stark: the accused billionaire treated as peripheral, the victims scrutinized.
An email attributed to Epstein recounts a conversation suggesting Krischer believed Epstein’s conduct was “barely criminal” and essentially inappropriate rather than predatory. The email contains spelling errors and could reflect Epstein’s own spin. But the prosecutorial outcome speaks for itself.
The Palm Beach Police Department’s investigation laid the groundwork for much of what the public later learned about Epstein’s pattern of abuse. Yet the case stalled at the local level. Years later, when federal prosecutors negotiated a controversial plea agreement, the focus of outrage zeroed in on Acosta — who by then was serving in the Trump administration.
The Epstein files do not offer tidy conclusions. They offer names, timelines, emails, and uncomfortable contradictions. They suggest political affiliations may have shaped narratives. They highlight disparities in how power is scrutinized — or shielded.
Wow! AG Pam Bondi releases 3.5 MILLION pages of Epstein files and Bill Clinton’s name appears 1,193 times.
Bondi says Epstein and Clinton frequently flew together internationally on a plane equipped with a bed used to assault underage girls. pic.twitter.com/o3qC3awN8P
— Johnny Midnight
(@its_The_Dr) February 16, 2026
The same institutions that call for accountability in some corners of government appear far less interested when allegations land close to home. And that silence may be the most revealing detail of all.
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