DiscoverBBS Radio TV Station StreamsThe Epstein Files Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System, November 17, 2025
The Epstein Files Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System, November 17, 2025

The Epstein Files Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System, November 17, 2025

Update: 2025-11-17
Share

Description

The Epstein Files: Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti: Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System

Exposing the truth behind 100,000+ pages of Jeffrey Epstein files—and whether America still has one system of justice or two.

On this high-impact episode of Eric A. Cinotti: Unplugged, constitutional scholar, lawyer, veteran, and nationally syndicated broadcaster Eric A. Cinotti tears away the noise and confronts the Jeffrey Epstein case using only hard facts—court records, government documents, and official investigations. No rumors. No message-board speculation. No fantasy “client lists.”

Having taken the oath to this country multiple times—as a veteran, lawyer, judge, and firefighter—Eric Andrew Cinotti asks the question at the center of the Epstein scandal:

Are we still a nation of laws, or have we become a nation of deals—where the right donor, the right lobbyist, and the right phone call can make the worst crimes disappear into sealed files and quiet settlements?

Eric walks you through the verified Epstein timeline:

The 2005 Palm Beach investigation, where police and the FBI identified at least 36 underage girls, some as young as 14, who reported sexual abuse inside Jeffrey Epstein’s mansion.
The secret 2008 non-prosecution agreement that let Epstein avoid a full federal trial, plead in Florida state court, and serve only about 13 months in a county facility—with unusually generous work-release privileges.
The 2019 federal sex-trafficking indictment in New York, again involving minor girls as young as 14, and Epstein’s death in federal custody, officially ruled a suicide.
The conviction and 20-year federal sentence of Ghislaine Maxwell for recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein, confirming that this was a long-running, organized operation.

From there, Eric Cinotti exposes what the government is still holding back when it talks about the Epstein files:

More than 100,000 pages of Epstein-related documents in Department of Justice and FBI systems.
Over 300 gigabytes of digital evidence: seized devices, images, videos, flight logs, financial records, search warrants, police reports, internal memos, interview summaries, and more.
A federal judge openly criticizing DOJ’s focus on a small stack of grand jury pages as a “diversion” from this much larger trove of Epstein documents.

Eric then breaks down the Epstein Files Transparency Act and the current fight in Washington over releasing those files:

A House bill designed to force the Attorney General to release Epstein-related DOJ documents with narrowly defined redactions.
Overwhelming public support—around 90% of Americans—for releasing at least some of the Epstein files, and more than three-quarters supporting a full release with victims’ identities protected.
Democrats, Republicans, and independents converging on one rare point of agreement: the American people deserve to know what their own government knew about Jeffrey Epstein, who enabled him, and when they knew it.

With the precision of a legal investigator and the blunt honesty of a combat veteran, Eric A. Cinotti explains:

What a non-prosecution agreement actually is, and why Epstein’s 2008 deal is a textbook example of a two-tier justice system in America.
How search warrants, grand juries, chain of custody, and internal DOJ oversight really work in cases like this.
The difference between real Epstein evidence—contact books, flight logs, emails, financial records, police reports, victim interviews—and the myth of a magical “Epstein client list” invented by social media.
How to demand maximum transparency with maximum responsibility: exposing institutional failures and decisions that protected a predator, while still protecting victims and legitimate national security interests.

Eric refuses to sensationalize the pain of survivors. Instead, he centers:

Victims’ rights and privacy, explaining why names and identifying details must never be thrown into the public arena.
The need for independent oversight or a commission to supervise any release of the Epstein files, rather than a political document dump that could re-victimize survivors or compromise ongoing investigations.
The simple reality that we do not need fantasies when the documented facts are already damning enough.

In a powerful, patriotic closing, Eric Andrew Cinotti makes clear that the Jeffrey Epstein files are not just about one man’s evil—they are a stress test of the American promise itself:

Do we still believe that no one is above the law?
Will we continue to tolerate a two-tier justice system—one for ordinary Americans and another for wealthy predators with private jets, private islands, and powerful friends?
Will we let the Epstein story become just another partisan talking point and clickbait scandal, or will we insist on facts, documents, and real accountability for everyone involved, including those inside our own institutions?

If you want a serious, constitutionally grounded, emotionally honest, and truly unplugged analysis of the Jeffrey Epstein case, the Epstein files, and what they mean for the future of the Republic, this is the episode you do not skip.


“I’m Eric A. Cinotti. This is Unplugged—because the Republic deserves the whole story.”>
Comments 
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

The Epstein Files Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System, November 17, 2025

The Epstein Files Facts, Not Fantasies – Eric A. Cinotti Unplugged vs. America’s Two-Tier Justice System, November 17, 2025

ericacinottispeaks@gmail.com (Author)