They stood in Washington and refused to be quiet.
Six women, once silenced by fear and shame, now demanding the U.S. government unlock what it has hidden for years. Files. Names. Decisions. Failures. They say justice itself is on trial—and that partial truth is just another lie. The room shook when they spoke of powe… Continues…
They did not come to fuel conspiracies; they came to end them. Jess Michaels, Wendy Avis, Marijke Chartouni, Jena-Lisa Jones, Lisa Phillips, and Liz Stein stood together, not as symbols, but as survivors who refused to let Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes be reduced to rumor and partisan theater. They described how institutions saw warning signs and looked away, how a “master manipulator” thrived because systems built to protect the vulnerable instead protected the powerful.
Their demand was precise and unwavering: unseal the Justice Department’s investigative files and expose every enabler who helped Epstein operate in the shadows. They rejected speculation about political figures without proof, insisting that truth—not rage, not ratings—must lead. The recent death of Virginia Giuffre weighed heavily, a reminder of the cost of delay. For these women, real justice means full disclosure, systemic reform, and an end to the secrecy that allowed a predator’s world to exist at all.





