The Bulwark Podcast - Julie K. Brown: Hiding the Truth in the Epstein Files
Episode Date: December 30, 2025The DOJ is releasing random Epstein documents to distract the public, while also intentionally covering the faces of men in images. It's also pulling docs that reveal Trump's name. Epstein's victims t...hink the government's messy release is all designed to protect their not publicly-known perpetrators. Meanwhile, more victims are coming forward to Julie, THE reporter who got the Epstein matter reopened after her investigation of his 2008 deal that no other modern pedophile would ever have received. Ghislaine Maxwell is key to understanding the whole case, Republican donors may be named in the files, and Trump flew on the Epstein plane eight times. Julie K. Brown joins Tim Miller. show notes: Julie's Substack Julie's reporting at the Miami Herald "Perversion of Justice," Julie's investigation into Epstein The NYT on Epstein's wealth Robert Draper on MTG's break with Trump, referenced by Tim
Transcript
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Hey, everybody with all of this Epstein stuff that's been coming out over the holidays.
It's been kind of tough to process everything and understand what's really going on.
And I assume for some of you all, like, you've been relatively new to the story and not been following it minute by minute over the past decade.
And so it's a little bit head swirling.
So I wanted to bring on Julie Brown, who has been covering the Epstein case from the jump, having written the critical story that led to his second indictment.
And so I want to grab her to talk about these recent files,
but also just going to take the lens back for everybody.
And you kind of rewind back to that period from 2015, 16, 17, 18,
when the attention started to come back on to Epstein.
He had been first, he was first Trump in front of the 90s.
And then he first got that sweetheart deal and the aughts.
And then the story comes back into focus,
thanks to Julie Brown and the teens.
So I wanted to kind of start there and give everybody a little bit of a timeline, a little bit longer lens perspective on this.
And then we get into the news as well.
So so much has been happening for Julie.
She's so busy right now.
I appreciate her taking the time to talk with all of us about that.
I hope you enjoy it.
Up next, Julie Kay Brown.
Hello and welcome to the Bullwark podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Could not be more delighted to welcome to the show.
Something I've got to know a little bit over the past few years.
She is a writer for the Miami Herald.
She wrote the Proversion of Justice series and a book on all the things related to Jeffrey Epstein.
It's Julie K. Brown.
How you doing, Julie?
Hi there.
I'm doing good.
You know, sometimes in podcast land, you glaze the guest.
a little bit, you know, you want to make them feel important
and seem important to the audience.
So you kind of talk about their highlights.
I don't know that that's necessary here for you
and your role in the Epstein Files was just so significant.
And I was, as we were kind of looking through various things that came out,
there's this one email that caught a couple people's eye,
they own to read about the significance of your work
in that perversion of Justice Series at the Miami Herald.
We'll get into all the redacting.
They're redacting who these emails are from and two.
for some reason but it's an internal DOJ email and one person emails to someone else are we open on
this can we be like are we open on investigating upstein and then it has a link to your story and then
the person replies yes we're open as of today it's on the DL for now and so you know this is a guy that
had been investigated many years prior got out was dormant for a decade and then you begin this
series and it kind of starts this cascade including the investigation that ends
getting him arrested. I see if you knew all that at some level, but that was pretty remarkable to
see. And I'm just wondering if you could kind of take our listeners back before we kind of get into
the new stuff to that period. And like what was happening at that time that got you back into the
story? Well, there were a lot of things. Donald Trump was running for president for the first time.
And I saw an article that had been written about this woman who had filed a lawsuit against him
and Epstein accusing him of, you know, raping her, essentially.
This was Katie Johnson.
This is Katie Johnson's case, yes.
And it sort of just brought it up again in my head.
It wasn't like I said, oh, I'm going to investigate the Katie Johnson's story.
I sort of thought, I remember reading about this guy and that he had sexually assaulted
all these underage girls in Palm Beach.
And whatever happened to this guy?
I mean, it seems like he's still out there.
And so I just started sort of looking into, you know, what?
had happened. And it just seemed, you know, like, why did this guy get away with this? If he raped
all these girls and there seemed to be just tons of information and court records that showed that
they had a lot of evidence to convict him. So I thought, well, the only way I'm going to really
understand this as an investigative reporter, instead of reading what everybody else has written
about him, I wanted to look at all the raw material that they had from the very beginning and evaluate it
from that perspective, rather than just writing what other people had written or taken everything
that had been written as being a complete record of why he got away with it or how the
crimes were committed. So it essentially was sort of a fact-finding mission. To me, it seemed like
a cold case. Nobody was really looking at it at this period of time, even though there now was
woman that was accusing him and assumed to be president of sexual assault. It was pretty
graphic lawsuit that she had filed about what had happened. So I thought, I'm just going to start
at the beginning and find out who this guy is and how he got away with his crimes. Yeah. And so if that's
2016, this article comes out in 2018, then there's a period of time that you, and also it's related with
Alex Acosta, as the person that's referenced in this initial story about who is the prosecutor
to Miami gets appointed the Department of Labor, so it's Trump and Acosta.
As I was working on this, coincidentally, he nominated Alex Acosta as his labor secretary,
and by that time, of course, I knew that Alex Acosta was the U.S. attorney in Miami who
approved of his so-called sweetheart deal.
And I thought at the time he was maybe not even going to get confirmed because this was a
pretty serious blight on his record.
And so I thought it was possible, but it just seemed like they kind of smoothed over it.
He sort of used the same lines he had always used, like, you know, we didn't know there were so many victims.
A lot of the victims didn't want to cooperate.
I mean, there was this whole line that he had over the years about why he decided to give him this deal.
And so once again, I thought, well, wait a minute, I've just gotten, by that time, I had gotten the police report in the state attorney files.
And to me, it didn't look like that at all.
It looked like they had a lot of young girls that were ready to cooperate.
So I still had my day job, so to speak, because, you know, we had the Parkland shooting in the midst of this.
I remember taking a break to help with that coverage.
And as you know, Miami is, you know, always full of crazy news.
So I'd be doing other stuff in the middle of it, but I just kept coming back to this case.
And so you mentioned how you knew that there had been the other young girls that accused Epstein and had been victimized by him.
So then part of that, like, period, is you're cultivating.
relationships with them, right, or with some of them? Well, that took a long time. That was a really
long process because all their names were redacted from all the files. So I didn't know who they
were. So I sort of came at it about three different ways. One, I tried to contact the lawyers
who represented some of them, who by now were filing civil lawsuits against Epstein. Number two,
I, you know, just did an old-fashioned spreadsheet and started finding
their names just organically in the files. You know, whenever they were talking about redactions
with the Epstein files, as you know, a lot of the victim's names weren't redacted from this
batch that we just got over the past week and a half or so. So it was the same thing back then.
There were mistakes that were made with the redactions, so I did get some names from the records
themselves. And then once I got maybe five, six, seven names, I was able to figure out who
their friends were through social media.
And Epstein had a strange sort of obsession with girls that looked very, very young,
blonde-haired, petite, often blue-eyed.
I mean, he had a type.
So it wasn't hard to figure out when you look at who their friends were, who possibly else
could have been a victim.
So it was a big puzzle that I sort of had to put together.
Yeah, I remember the last time we talked about this a couple years ago,
you said that, like, you literally wrote some of them letters to try to get them to
talk? Like handwritten letters? Yeah, I wrote snail mail letters. Yep. I've got to address this and I
wrote about 80 letters. And I only got like two responses. Wow. But they were key. One of the
girls was in my series and she was a wonderful young woman who very articulate and who was key to my
series. And so I'm wondering then, as you talk to all those, I want to get to kind of present day
and what we've learned in this latest batch.
But I'm just curious about their perspective and all this.
I assume that many of them you still talk to and communicate with and hear from.
Like, I can imagine a bunch of different things, like being sick of it, being passionate
about wanting justice, like not trusting anybody feeling like it's all political.
Like, what is your near experience with the victims?
Like, what are they thinking right now?
Is this all us back in there?
I think it's all that.
It's a range of emotions.
You know, most of the ones that are pretty in contact.
regularly. They want justice. That's why they contact me regularly. They point things out to me that
they see in the files. Or, you know, they just want a vent. You know, it's almost like I have
another source who was involved in this story from the very beginning of this case, a law
enforcement source. And we talk all the time because it's almost like we were there from the
beginning. And this, remember, now it's been eight years. So it's sort of like we're in a club.
You know, that we never really asked to join, but we're in this Epstein club.
And there's very few people, really, that know this story, like every single document or most of the documents like I do.
So there isn't a whole lot of people that are in this group that see something and will say, oh, my God, did you see this?
And it will be, you know, something new or unnerving.
That's interesting.
So some of the victims are, like, going through this, like, research.
Just like reading stuff and looking for clues or looking for...
Oh, there's a couple of them that are really good investigators who spend time on the computer
and look these people up and find out who's this person.
And, oh, yeah, quite a number of them are like that, really invested for obvious reasons.
I mean, to some of them, I'm sure it's somewhat therapeutic.
So I want to get through what we've learned in the latest batch.
The first, you're central and part of it, though.
So I guess we should just cover that ground first, because this was a weird one.
One of the things in this latest batch of files was a American Airlines flight record from 2019 with your name on it,
include your maiden name.
So you're sure that that's your flight, not another Julie Brown.
Well, it turns out it wasn't my flight.
It was a flight that I had booked.
Okay.
But it was a flight for one of the victims that I was supposed to interview.
Ironically, the day after Jeffrey Epstein was arrested.
This whole interview was planned well before.
I mean, I actually booked the record, I think, in June,
but the flight was for July,
and it was for an interviewee, one of the victims.
You know, I could say her name because she's been out there publicly.
It was for Annie Farmer, who I planned to interview.
I had never interviewed her or her sister Maria,
who was the first to report Epstein way back in 1996.
So, you know, it was hard to see because, you know, like everything with this document reveal by the DOJ, it is like they put everything in a salad bowl and just threw it online.
So it's hard.
We still don't have the grand jury subpoena that pertains to this record that they obtained from American Airlines.
The record is heavily redacted, except for, of course, my name.
And so it is a little unnerving when you see your name, especially when they have your maid name, which you don't even use publicly attached to a grand jury subpoena.
But it appears that they sort of just sloppily did this subpoena pertaining to some victims, I suppose.
You know, the date of this grand jury is 2010.
This was a record that they were signing in 2020, which was 10 years later.
So you sort of look at it and say, what the hell?
heck, were they doing here? And do you have any sense what the heck they were doing there?
I've been talking to prosecutors today, and they said that they think that it was, you know,
that they made a mistake with saying it was from a grand jury in 2010. But what they were
probably trying to do, and we don't know for sure, was that they had requested all the flight
records, probably for Maxwell, who we could see in there as part of these records. And some of
his victims with probably one of them was Annie. So her record came up and my name was attached to it
because we booked the flight. We paid for the flight for her for us to meet up with her and
interview her. I mean, we really don't know for sure, but that seems to be what it is. But again,
this is a product of the fact that they are throwing stuff out there. I mean, surely this was
part of a file that had the grand jury subpoena next to it, right? You know, when you do a file,
when you're doing something, you put a file and you say, here are all my, whatever it is,
and then you have everything in the file. They seem to not be doing that. They're throwing out the
returns of the grand jury. Who knows? It could be weeks before we get that actual subpoena because
they have it somewhere else. They're throwing things online without, you know, there's been so many
strange things. I mean, we saw that there was one pertaining to that letter that he, you know, may have
written to Larry Nasser. And they just put that online. And you don't think that that was part of a file of
things that they had on his death, you know, that they found in his cell, you know, but they didn't
put it online like that. So you don't know whether they even investigated who wrote that letter.
Yeah. And then they come out and say it's not a real letter, but it's like that's the one thing that
they're denying is real. And it's not an orderly process, to say the least. So at the biggest
picture then, and it seems like one of your takeaways is that it's a total mess. But what other
takeaways do you have for what we've seen so far in the latest batch of files? Well, the question
is why is it such a mess? You could just say, well, you know, they had to do it fast, or you can
make all these excuses that would provide some kind of idea why they're doing it this way.
Or you could say, which a lot of the victims believe, that they're doing this on purpose.
One of the ways you be transparent is you actually release the files.
And when you have something like a tip, an FBI tip, you have the paperwork that says right
behind it, we verified that this is not Epstein's handwriting and this is where it was mailed.
And here's what we did about this tip.
But they're not doing that.
They're throwing stuff out there
and they're doing it in such a disorganized manner
that it does distract from what the real story should be.
And in this case, the real story should be
whether this was a corrupt deal
and whether this is a cover-up.
And when you're focusing on the shiny objects,
such as a Larry Nasser letter,
or there's like a million other examples I can give you,
you're spending your time looking at that
rather than what the prosecutors were doing
behind the scenes to make sure that Epstein got a better deal than any other pedophile
who ever committed this kind of crime has ever been given.
The cover-up element of it is just, well, and there's the original cover-up of why you got
that deal, right?
And then now we've kind of this ongoing rolling cover-up.
That's like a reluctant one because they passed the legislation now.
But, you know, you look at the files, and in addition to what you're talking about,
there's also strange redactions, very favorable to Trump redactions.
Actions, like we're redacting the picture of him and Glenn Maxwell on Steve Bannon's phone.
For example, there's another, I guess, report from some woman put forward about Trump and touching her nipples or whatever.
And, like, Trump's name is redacted, but it wasn't in a separate file so you can figure out who it is.
And so that is part of this.
And there's a bunch of stuff that hasn't been released, right?
So, like, how do you assess that, you know, like the ongoing cover-up element of this?
That's all you can say, that it is a cover-up.
because they're not providing the information in a way that the public can really understand.
Look, if I'm having trouble understanding what it is, the public sure isn't going to be able to understand a lot of what it is.
I see stuff all over the place with them saying, look at this, and they're explaining a document.
I know the document isn't what they're saying it is, but it's not their fault.
They don't really understand all the details of this case.
and the government is making it almost impossible to do that.
So what are the things we've seen that have been no-worthy?
Like one thing that jumped to my eye, but again,
is maybe not understanding exactly what is there,
was one of the DOJ docs references 10 co-conspirators that they were looking into.
Right.
Massey has said that the survivors have given them the names of 20 men,
so I don't know.
I guess men might not be necessarily co-conspirators.
I don't know. What did you make of that revelation?
Well, we know that one of the men in that document, because that document, by the way,
elsewhere in the record is not fully redacted.
And the name in the document that is exactly the virtual is the same reveals that one of the co-conspirators
listed in that document is Les Wexner, who is, as we know, Jeffrey Epstein's long time,
client, I mean, when I say client, I mean business, he was his only client for, he claimed for a long
time. So we know that one of them is Wexner. I believe a couple of them could be people who worked
for Epstein in the sense that they flew as planes. So they were, you know, furry these girls. And
they could have also been a couple of the assistants who were scheduling and recruiting girls.
Those assistants' names are now redacted because in, you know, in recent years, after they've been
interviewed, I believe, by authorities by the SD&Y. They come to conclude that those assistants were,
in essence, victims. You know, this was his MO. He would recruit these girls and then use them as
sex objects. And when they got to be too old, as in 24, you know, a lot of these girls came from
nothing. And so they had nowhere to go. So he hired them as assistance. So that's who I think some of the
people are that are listed as co-conspirators. You know, there were other names, a lot of names
in here that were redacted. So it's hard to know whether any of them were men who were involved
with Epstein in any nefarious way. The one thing that really strikes me from all this
is that, okay, so especially if it's true that 10 co-conspirators aren't necessarily men, we have
had accusations and allegations and reports that Epstein trafficked these girls.
other men or shared them with other men at various parties or other things of that nature.
And, you know, as I mentioned, Massey said he has the survivors have given him the names of 20 men.
At this point, what is the hold up in that?
You know, like, is DOJ protecting people or do survivors not want to name folks because
they're worried about legal ramifications?
Are there not as many men as people think?
Like, what do you think is happening with why there have been so, besides like formerly Prince Andrew and Les
Wexner, like, there really aren't a lot of men's names being named at this point.
Well, they've named them me, so I know who a lot of them are, but they won't tell me it
on the record, only off the record because they are afraid. I mean, think about it.
Epstein got away with this almost cleanly the first time, okay? In subsequent years after
the sweetheart deal, there were more victims coming forward. He still was out there continuing
to abuse women for, for, you know, a decade later.
And in their minds, the fact that then he got arrested and he ended up dead, to be
honestly, a lot of them don't believe that he committed suicide.
And they think that this is all one big government cover up.
And so why would you put your neck on the line then and name all these men when you feel
like there is a government cover map protecting the men?
So I think that there is a understandable reluctance for them to trust the government
in revealing these names because they feel like Epstein has been getting away with this.
And all these men now have been getting away with this for quite a long time.
So I understand their reluctance.
But at this point, I guess you've got, I don't know, the oversight.
They have some of these names, right?
Members of Congress, some of them could go to a journalist.
I certainly don't think anyone's going to feel satisfied.
Certainly, I would assume not the victims.
But I think the public, you know, if this release ends without other.
perpetrators being named. And I guess you're, unless there aren't any other perpetrators,
which you're saying is not the case, obviously. No, it's not the case. There are. I don't know
what the answer is. I don't think that they're going to reveal a whole lot because I think that
the way that they are handling this so far shows that they've been, you know, reluctant,
if not refusing to provide even basic information. I mean, they're redacting photographs of men
in some of these files.
What do you mean?
We could tell that some of these pictures that they've redacted include pictures of men.
I mean, you could just tell they are, you know, whether you'd see a suit jacket, you know,
below and the face has a big black black over it.
I mean, there are people that have been redacted from these files.
So, and we know that they removed one of Trump's photos.
And then when they were called on it, they had to put it back in.
So, you know, we can't Trump.
These files are going to really reveal the story here, or the truth, I guess, is what we really want.
And the way that they're doing it almost hides the truth.
Yeah.
One of the interesting things that came out, there's a really long Marjorie Taylor-Green profile by Robert Draper that came out on New York Times on Monday.
And there was an interesting passage.
Green says that Trump was calling her, this was before that they'd passed the bill, trying to berate her to not be on board with the Epstein file release.
fact. She said that Trump said to her, my friends will get hurt if abusers were named. And then
Green said she told him to bring the victims the Oval Office then and let them have a chance to say
their peace. And Trump said to her that they had done nothing to merit the honor of coming there.
And then she said she has never talked to Trump since. I thought that's pretty noteworthy.
Again, you know, who the hell knows? Trump's a liar. But like, for him to say my friends will get
hurt if abusers are named, felt pretty telling. Whether that's a cover or West
of himself being one of the friends or not.
It definitely indicates that he is conscious of
and they are conscious of protecting people
who are perpetrators in this release.
Those men who know who they are.
So it wouldn't surprise me if they were reaching out to Trump
and saying, you know, you got to stop this, you know.
And who knows?
What else they know besides their own activity?
They might know of other men's activity.
So this is one big possible snowball here and, you know, it could be, you know, that they reached out to him and asked him to just not do this because it's going to lead not only to, you know, embarrassment, but possible criminal allegations against people that he knows or gets money from donors.
I was told it possible or in here some of his MAGA or Republican donors might be named in these.
files, which is kind of ironic because he, at one point, he said we're going to investigate all the
Democrats that are in these files. Well, there aren't all Democrats in these files. This is not a,
you know, right versus left, a Republican versus Democrat issue. This is sexual assault.
And it doesn't discriminate based on your political party. There are bad people on both sides of the aisle
involved in this.
There's a couple more things on the Trump of this. I'm curious your take on. I mean, there's just like some of his
obvious lies. Like in 2024, he posted he'd never been on Epstein's plane. This release is showing
that he's been on the plane maybe eight times on the manifest for one of the planes. The document
says it was Epstein, Trump, and then 20-year-old redaction. So we assume it's a 20-year-old
girl, young woman that was on the plane. It was just the three of them at one point. And then
there's Trump and Maxwell stuff as well. They know, their picture being together in Bannon's
phone. You wrote a substack on your substack recently about Trump and Maxwell's
relationship. So is there anything in what we've seen that it all informs your view on
the extent of Trump's relationship, the extent of his exposure with Epstein and Maxwell?
Well, I think the biggest reveal, so to speak, is where Maxwell is sitting right now.
And that is in a much cozier prison than she was in before. And she was moved there without really
any explanation for the longest time. Todd Blanche just recently in a couple of days ago said
that it was for her safety. If it really was for her safety, why didn't they announce that when
they moved her? I mean, it seems odd to me that it took them, you know, how many months before
they came up with that. So, you know, I just think that Maxwell is the key to this whole thing
and the fact that she's now aiming for a pardon and that Trump hasn't, you know, would
think almost any other president or
lawmaker who was asked that
question would say, no way
is she getting a pardon. She was convicted
as abusing girls. I mean,
she wasn't just his recruiter.
She participated, according
to her conviction and the
testimony in court. She participated
in the abuse.
So I do think that
that is the key and it's sort of
these files being
released like this, hundreds
and thousands of them, you know, in the
back of my mind, I'm thinking, what does Maxwell know? How did she get to where she is? Is she lining
something up here? Her habeas corpus petition was interesting, by the way, that she filed, because
she alleged, you know, that she had an unfair trial on the new evidence is being released now
with these files that show even more that her trial was unfair and that there were constitutional
violations. And one of the things she says is that there were settlements with, I think,
Don't quote me on the number, but it was around 25 men made out-of-court settlements, secret
settlements in connection with Epstein, which I always thought that was what was happening.
A lot of the men whose names I've been told were involved, who haven't been made public,
were likely making out-of-court settlements with their victims.
Well, and that's maybe why some of the victims can't talk, too.
Maybe.
I would assume.
Maybe.
The Maxwell being in that prison also has got to be the thing that makes the victims the most pissed at this point.
I would assume.
Far be it for me to get inside their head.
Yeah.
Let me add another thing.
As I understand it, I'm not a lawyer, but as I understand it, even if you make out-of-court settlement, you know, with a NDA, if it involves criminal activity, you're still allowed to talk about it.
So I just wanted to add that.
So if they have criminal information, they shouldn't be bound by the NDA.
But they're also like the non-prosecution agreements, right?
right too? I don't think that any of them signed non-prosecution agreements. The victims? I don't
think so. Right. So that was just a deal between, you know, the government and Epstein. No, they
didn't. I mean, they subsequently talked to me even for my series. So even after receiving the
settlements. Speaking of some of those victims, you did post an enticing social media post I must
ask you about, which you said that you've received a lot of new information about girls and young
women who were sexually trafficked in the wake of these files. Obviously, you know, this is you
in the middle of reporting. I'm not asking you to break any news. I'm just curious what were you referencing
like this case in particular or just like the broader question of powerful men going after
the girls? No, I'm talking to victims who either, believe it or not, there are some victims around
the world, for example, who don't live in our country, who don't get Epstein news around the clock like
we are. So they weren't really aware of this story as much as we are here in the U.S.
So I've heard from some victims in other countries who now are getting this information and
they are coming forward and saying, yeah, I was one of those models, for example, who he
brought from XYZ country and put me up in this, you know, apartment home in Manhattan and
promised to make me the next Victoria's secret model. And instead, he just,
abused me. So I'm hearing from new people, I would say, at least once a week. And, you know,
they don't want to go public. They're afraid. You know, they look at what, for example, what happened
with Marjorie Taylor Green and how she sort of got attacked, especially, you know, by Trump people.
And, you know, and she claims she was threatened. And these girls were already really afraid to
say anything to begin with because Epstein often said, you know, I'm going to make your life hell.
if you tell anybody about this. I mean, one woman said that he really investigated them, too.
I mean, he found out one woman had a mother that had cancer and he said, I'm going to give you
all the medical, they were poor. They didn't have access to great medical care. So he promised
to get her mother the care that she deserved. So she went through with the abuse and, you know,
and then she felt horrible about it. And he said, well, that's fine. I don't have to continue paying
for your mother's medical care.
You know, that's the kind of thing he did.
And the scale of this stuff is so, it's like hard to even wrap your head around.
It's unfathomable.
I guess you must have felt that way reporting this out, like feeling like there must be
some end to the amount of victims at some point, but it's like the numbers are so, so vast.
And just when I was watching the documentary on this and then like the local Palm Beach
police trying to figure out all the girls who got, you know, who at some point were brought to
his house. And then now for you to say, after all these years, there to be women who are
overseas who are still reporting him, I mean, it's just truly like hard to kind of wrap
your head around, just the scope. You have no idea that the number of calls I'm getting on a daily
basis now. It's incredible. I mean, tips that I would have jumped at and written, you know,
before all this happened because they are good stories that I can't, I'm like trying.
to prioritize. It's completely overwhelming. I fall asleep with my laptop beside me on the bed and I
wake up and pick it up as soon as I wake up in the morning and I'm still, you know, answering emails
and trying to follow up on all these tips. Now also I get the benefit, which I'm not complaining
about at all, of some people who are really good with computers who are able to decipher some of
these documents that have attachments that I haven't been able to open and they're able to figure
out away with whatever technology that they have, that they're able to figure out.
So I'm also getting tech people that are sending me stuff.
So it's so much material.
It's mind-boggling.
Is there anything in all of that that, like, you've learned recently or from these files
or from those tips that has, like, surprised you or that has made you feel like
there's a new perspective on this that you haven't had?
You've been doing this for so long now.
Is it just all just incremental, I can.
stuff that we already kind of knew. I would say most of it is the stuff that I'm getting is
just more like, oh my God, this is worse than I thought. That's what I think every day. That's
really what I think every day. This is worse than I thought. You know, this is like, wow,
there are big people involved. And, you know, and then like I said, when you see your name in the
files like the way I did, you know, people can fault me for like being an alarmist, I suppose,
and that there being a logical explanation for me, given the fact that I bought that ticket.
But look, I'm absorbed in this for eight years, and I've seen a lot.
And so when you see something like that, I think it's just human nature to think, what is this?
I'm human, you know, and I just, I'm trying to cope with all of this as best I can, you know,
all I can say. And I think that speaks volume just in itself, right? Like that you, and you've
talked to these victims, you've read the reports, you've heard firsthand about the just unbelievable
abuse they went through as young girls. And for you to now say, after all of that, after years of
consuming all that, that you still, like, think the bottom might be lower than you thought, that it
might be worse than you realized. It's pretty striking. Yeah. And there's so much, like, I get
faulted a lot because everybody's a critic, right, no matter how hard you try. And, you know, I get
faulted for not examining his alleged intelligence ties. It's just another whole big giant
pocket of stuff. You know, I've got a million different rabbit holes and that's just another
whole pocket of stuff. I quite frankly just haven't been able to have the time with working a full-time
journalism job to dig into. That's like, you know, this is taking.
me just focusing on the victims is taking all my time.
Well, it requires that amount of work, right?
And so, I think obviously this is just, was unbelievable important to work on the victims.
It's how this process started.
They got him arrested again and refocused people on this heinous decades-long crime.
It's legitimate for people to ask about the other stuff that's out there.
I mean, you don't rule out the intel stuff.
I don't, I mean.
No, no, no, I think it's quite possible.
this is a story that's big enough for a lot of reporters, you know, and I think that there are some people doing good work on his money picture. The New York Times has been doing Matthew Goldstein, has been doing some great work on his finances. And so I try to focus on things that I know I can, is more in my wheelhouse because it's just too big of a story for me to do everything.
The finance story I did find interesting that Times Finance story, you said, I'll put a link in the show notes.
people that want to read it because it does paint a picture of him as like a just a real scam artist
you know like there's like that was I think the last time we talked or two times ago one of the
questions I asked you was like what do we know about where he got his money and it's still and it still
is like uncertain right like and it does feel like he was shaking a lot of rich people down and and
some of it like may have been related to the girls but some of it I think was way to embarrassment
like if you're a rich person and you get hucked you know and a huckster comes in and takes your
money I think both of those things could be true right that like some of it's
some of the people who was working with also were abusers and some of them were just embarrassed
that they were so easily scammed by him.
That was kind of one of my takeaways.
Right.
Well, Leon Black, you know, he gave Epstein an awful lot of money that authorities right now
are really, quite frankly, it's public that they're investigating why he gave Epstein so much
money.
So there's a million different, as I said, rabbit holes you could jump down with this case.
There's the modeling interest part of it. Epstein had a modeling agency that he said that he was
sort of modeling after Trump's agency, trying to do the same thing. Right. I was going to say that
ties into Trump. Yeah. And, you know, and then there's the intelligence part of it. There's the
money laundering slash whatever, you know, fraud he was doing. He had his hands in so many different
things. I mean, he was getting ballerinas. You know, he had got a couple of girls from interlock in
the camp in Michigan.
for musical protégés.
You know, he had a home there.
I'm told right next to the lodge where all the young girls were housed.
You know, he had ties to Hollywood.
You know, there's message pads there from Harvey Weinstein.
There are actors I'm hearing that, you know, what were associated with him.
So it's big.
It's big.
And he was such a connector in that way.
Yeah.
Like, also, you know, like the thing I keep going back to is that email between, I was reading
the full exchanges of an email between him and Peter Thiel.
Yeah.
And it's like, he's trying to get Peter Thiel.
He's like, come to dinner with Woody Allen.
Right.
And Peter Thiel's like, that sounds interesting, I guess.
Maybe I can do that sometime.
I don't know.
But it's like, well, what was happening there?
I mean, Peter, he was investing with Peter Thiel.
Peter Thiel, obviously is interested in young girls.
He was really tied up in all that.
Well, there's pictures.
Yeah.
There's pictures of those, some of those dinners in the files with Woody Allen and other
famous men that are in the same pictures at a table like, you know, that's
exactly what he was doing. He was gathering all these people together.
So just kind of circling back on the Trump part of it, because I know a lot of folks
that are listening are interested in. And it's the big question right now is to like,
why the extent of the cover up on this from him? We started, you mentioned the Katie Johnson
accusations. You know, when people talk about the Trump cover up, like maybe he is just like
sympathetic to other rich guys and who have me too accusations and him and Epstein were just
pals running around. Maybe it is worse than that. Maybe, you know, like these direct accusations
about Trump have merit. Maybe there's intel elements to it. Obviously, you don't know,
and you're not going to be the jury on this, but like, what do you make of the extent of the Trump
potential exposure here? Well, let me just start by saying, I don't have any evidence, and I
haven't seen any concrete evidence, you know, as in on paper with photographs, you know, scheduling
books or whatever. I haven't seen any evidence that Trump, you know, was involved with his
sex trafficking network. I haven't seen any hard evidence. But I think that the way that this has
been handled by him in the Justice Department really should raise questions on the part of
Congress as to why he was, you know, really browbeating, you know, members of Congress not to
prove this and saying things like you mentioned that Marjorie Telegreen said that it's going
heard a lot of his friends. That should be investigated. You know, all this should be
investigated. And I don't think it should be a partisan thing. I think that the Republicans should
want to investigate it, too. I mean, why did they release a couple of binders full of stuff
when Pam Bondi said they were going to release, you know, everything and it was on her desk?
I mean, there's some serious questions that I think need to be answered. And now we've a million
more files, they said. Yeah. And also the question should be raised about why did they say that
there wasn't anything here? You know, there definitely is stuff there. We're seeing some of the
memos. We're seeing that there were 10 co-conspirators, you know, and there might even be more that we don't
know because we don't have the files. But there's stuff there that shows that this was a massive
crime and that there were a lot of, you know, people that were involved. And, you know, it doesn't
seem like the government completely finished their investigation. It feels like they got Maxwell
and then they said, you know, that's it. We're done here. We got her. I mean, the only thing I
could say in their defense is that it's very hard to convict people based on crimes that were
convicted that long ago. If they were long ago, I think that they probably continued up until
his arrest, but some of them certainly were from young girls from a very long time ago. And
those cases are very hard to make. But there's other ways to make them. You know, Wyden is trying
to get more of his financial information showing he was making these big payments. And he's hit a brick
wall into Trump administration over that. So, you know, as they say, follow the money. So they should
be looking at that and giving widen the room to get some of those records. And again, I'm,
It's a long time ago, and so, you know, there is legal ramifications, but then there's also political and other reputational ramifications.
I mean, you know, it's like Trump says he wasn't on the plane with Epstein.
He's on the plane with Epstein and a 20-year-old girl.
Like, why?
What were they doing?
Who is, you know what I mean?
Like, to me, it's like, right.
And obviously, you know, if there was specific allegations or instances or accusations of rape or sexual sort of abuse, like that's important in its own right.
But also it's like, you knew what was happening.
What did you think it was happening when you were on a plane with a 20-year-old girl?
What did you think she was there for?
You know what I mean?
Like you knew at some level it was happening.
Right.
All right.
The last thing on Trump just really quick, because I've seen you pop off a little bit on this, is like, the other thing was that Epstein's death happened, you know, during the Trump administration.
I know that on the right, they tried to make this into a Hillary conspiracy theory, but Trump and Bill Barr were in charge when he died.
His brother, Epstein's brother now in his latest batch of files, claimed that he doesn't think.
it was a suicide and that Epstein was about to name names.
Epstein, another thing from the files is, I guess, said that his cellmate or whatever was trying
to kill him 18 days before he died, which is kind of a weird thing to say if you're planning
to kill yourself.
What do you make of all that?
At the least, it feels like it hasn't been fully investigated.
No, it not only wasn't fully investigated, but the way that it was investigated was so
incredibly slipshod that you have to wonder if they really were already convinced.
it was a suicide in their mind, so there was no need to investigate the possibility of anything
else. And we know that, you know, I've interviewed the forensic pathologist that was at the
autopsy, the one that his brother hired, who I've done a lot of work with in my previous
reporting about, you know, I covered Florida prisons for many, many years, so I know the way
that deaths happen in prison. Deaths, as in murders, happen in prison. And he has quite a lot of
experience in those kinds of cases too. And he doesn't believe for a lot of reasons that it was a
suicide. And I actually don't believe it was a suicide because it was too soon for, I think,
Epstein to give up. He had been only in jail for a month, you know, and he had a good chance of,
I think he had a shot anyway at getting out because the information that the SDNY had at that time
were from victims in Florida and his lawyers were going to argue that they would have been
covered by that immunity deal that he made in Florida.
So they had a good, you know, platform there to start with to get him off, you know.
He was also, you know, right before his rest, talking to Bannon and to other people about
how to kind of smooth this story over that I had written to sort of make it, you know, at one point
And I think they were trying to figure out a way to discredit me.
So he had been through this ammo, you know, stuff before hiring private investigators and really digging into people.
So I just think that it was too soon for him to just throw in the towel unless he was sick or something else was going on.
His brother doesn't believe it.
Neither does Maxwell, by the way.
Maxwell doesn't think he committed suicide either.
So those are the two people that presumably would know.
more about this, whether he was capable of it than anybody else.
But I just think the whole thing was done really messy, and it just raises questions.
The two guards that they charged, then they gave them sort of a deal, you know.
So the whole thing just doesn't sit well.
And the American public is pretty smart.
They've probably read some of this stuff too.
And I think most people don't believe the suicide angle.
Oh, man. Julie Brown, well, thank you for working through Christmas on all this, reading these files, taking these new tips. We appreciate you. I look forward to continue reading your work on your substack, which people should sign up for and at the Miami Herald. You've been on this for like almost a decade now, but I think you might have another decade ahead of you. I don't think that this is going to anywhere. Oh, please. I don't know. I want to retire at some point. But I think you're right. Actually, this story's going to outlive me. You know, it's going to be like the JFK assassination.
And it's definitely going to outlive me.
Well, happy New Year.
Same year.
Good evening of champagne and enjoyment and then get back to work, all right?
Okay.
Thank you.
Thanks so much to Julie K. Brown for her time today.
Tomorrow we will have a year-end pod with one of my phase.
It hasn't been on in late too long.
So I'm excited to get them back.
And we'll take you into the new year tomorrow and then give you a couple days off and we'll be back to the grind next week.
Appreciate you all very much.
See you tomorrow.
Peace.
I'm very my brother today.
Today, today, today, forever today.
