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The Epstein Carousel: Endlessly Spinning but Going Nowhere

The Epstein Carousel: Endlessly Spinning but Going Nowhere

In the grand theater of American scandals, few productions match the Jeffrey Epstein saga for its tireless endurance and remarkable lack of forward momentum. It is a narrative that circles endlessly, much like a carnival carousel powered by partisan winds rather than mechanical ingenuity. Years of investigations, millions of pages of documents released in waves including major tranches in 2025 and 2026, and a media apparatus locked in perpetual replay mode have produced more heat than illumination. More accusations than evidence. Fresh revelations remain as scarce as genuine contrition in Washington, yet the story dominates headlines with the persistence of a bad habit.

Reports have long suggested thousands of underage females ensnared in this web, with federal investigators estimating more than one thousand victims of sex trafficking and related abuses. One would anticipate a prosecutorial response proportionate to such scale, a veritable storm of indictments for statutory rape, a Class A felony that lies at the dramatic core of the Epstein case. Reality delivers something far more subdued. Epstein faced charges, met his end in custody, and his primary accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, secured a conviction on sex trafficking counts, earning a twenty-year sentence. A few peripheral figures faced similar consequences, but statutory rape charges against the glittering array of high-profile associates? Not one single indictment or conviction has materialized for statutory rape.

This evidentiary desert has done nothing to deter the narrative engineers. The Epstein case functions as the left-wing cudgel par excellence, deployed with theatrical flair against President Trump and Republican officials. Every resurfaced photograph, every tangential mention in the files transforms into irrefutable evidence of deep involvement for Trump detractors, according to the Trump hate machine. The identical media ecosystem that exhibited restrained curiosity throughout four years of the Biden administration suddenly rediscovers its zeal, framing each recycled detail as explosive. Congressional probes under Republican leadership earn minimal acknowledgment, while calls for additional scrutiny gloss over the striking inaction from the Biden-era Department of Justice. The selective amnesia proves both predictable and revealing.

The files brim with prominent Democrats. Former President Bill Clinton appears repeatedly, including documented flights on the infamous jet. Economist and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers features in correspondence and meetings. One might add former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, Senator George Mitchell, and modeling ties linked to figures like Jean-Luc Brunel. On the non-political front, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates pursued interactions that raised eyebrows. Others include financier Leon Black, retail executive Les Wexner, filmmaker Woody Allen, and even passing references to figures such as Noam Chomsky or Richard Branson. The list stretches onward, encompassing a cross-section of the elite world society.

The human toll stands undeniable. Careers have shattered under the weight of suspicion. Reputations suffered irreparable harm. Longstanding friendships and lucrative business alliances dissolved overnight. A British prince has been stripped of his title and evicted from personal palace amid the fallout. And the alleged transgression in his case involved passing classified information to Epstein – not sexual crimes.

The Epstein operation unquestionably constituted a sex trafficking and prostitution enterprise of grotesque proportions. Predators deserve accountability, and some received some measure of it. Yet the broader canvas of accusations drifts in a haze of political embellishment.

Consider the timeline. Initial probes in Florida yielded a notoriously lenient 2008 plea deal. Federal charges resurfaced in 2019. Maxwell faced justice in 2021. Massive document dumps followed in subsequent years, including over three million pages and additional materials in early 2026 under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Civil litigation produced settlements, such as multimillion-dollar resolutions involving banks like JPMorgan Chase or Bank of America, compensating clusters of victims. Judgments and payouts occurred, yet criminal convictions for the central allegation of statutory rape against the named elites remain absent. The Department of Justice under both Trump and Biden administrations brought no such charges. State and local prosecutors, the customary handlers of rape cases, pursued none. It is a prosecutorial vanishing act by political illusionists.

Media commentators and partisan operatives demand accountability with righteous fervor – and make accusations as if they were evidence — yet they bypass the glaring absence of courtroom victories. It proves far simpler to imply guilt through guilt-by-association than to construct ironclad cases founded on verifiable evidence. President Trump socialized with Epstein in earlier decades before severing ties. Clinton logged numerous flights. Gates engaged in meetings that later invited scrutiny. Association, however convenient for headlines, falls short of proof of participation in Epstein’s heinous and criminal activities.

The Epstein story exposes deeper maladies within the system. It reveals a media and political class adept at weaponizing tragedy for partisan advantage. Victims merit genuine truth-seeking, not perpetual exploitation as props in a theatrical narrative. The public deserves transparency unfiltered by ideological lenses, not daily reruns of an unproven script. Endless speculation passes for journalism. Baseless rumors and scurrilous whispers masquerade as insight. Thousands purportedly victimized by a serious felony, yet the roster of perpetrators for the core crimes is blank. How much of this epic constitutes documented fact, and how much serves as convenient political fiction?

Skepticism grows with each rotation of the carousel. If the scale matches the claims, the legal system failed spectacularly across multiple administrations and jurisdictions. If the scale reflects exaggeration, then the scandal ballooned into a tool for settling scores.

Americans witness a troubling pattern — outrage calibrated fory partisan utility. The left amplified the story against Trump while muting it under Biden. Republicans face demands for investigations that overlook prior efforts. This selective application of principle erodes public trust more effectively than any single document release.

After decades of scrutiny, the Epstein affair illuminates selective outrage far more brightly than it delivers justice. It stands as a cautionary tale of elite impunity, media manipulation, and the chasm between allegation and adjudication. Until prosecutors secure statutory rape convictions against actual perpetrators, or transparently explain their absence, the saga will persist in its dizzying unproductive orbit. In this carnival of contemporary scandal, the carousel continues to spin as a distraction from the lack of substance. More than a thousand victims and no prosecutions for statutory rape? Really?

So, there ‘tis.

About The Author

Larry Horist

So, there ‘tis… The opinions, perspectives and analyses of businessman, conservative writer and political strategist Larry Horist. Larry has an extensive background in economics and public policy. For more than 40 years, he ran his own Chicago based consulting firm. His clients included such conservative icons as Steve Forbes and Milton Friedman. He has served as a consultant to the Nixon White House and travelled the country as a spokesman for President Reagan’s economic reforms. Larry professional emphasis has been on civil rights and education. He was consultant to both the Chicago and the Detroit boards of education, the Educational Choice Foundation, the Chicago Teachers Academy and the Chicago Academy for the Performing Arts. Larry has testified as an expert witness before numerous legislative bodies, including the U. S. Congress, and has lectured at colleges and universities, including Harvard, Northwestern and DePaul. He served as Executive Director of the City Club of Chicago, where he led a successful two-year campaign to save the historic Chicago Theatre from the wrecking ball. Larry has been a guest on hundreds of public affairs talk shows, and hosted his own program, “Chicago In Sight,” on WIND radio. An award-winning debater, his insightful and sometimes controversial commentaries have appeared on the editorial pages of newspapers across the nation. He is praised by audiences for his style, substance and sense of humor. Larry retired from his consulting business to devote his time to writing. His books include a humorous look at collecting, “The Acrapulators’ Guide”, and a more serious history of the Democratic Party’s role in de facto institutional racism, “Who Put Blacks in That PLACE? -- The Long Sad History of the Democratic Party’s Oppression of Black Americans ... to This Day”. Larry currently lives in Boca Raton, Florida.

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