In 2019, Epstein was arrested and jailed on new sex trafficking charges. While awaiting trial, he was found dead in his cell. Despite protocol violations and missing security footage at the jail, the Justice Department ruled that Epstein had committed suicide.
The latest controversy involves 6 million Justice Department documents related to the Epstein case. Although evidence and Epstein’s victims allege his involvement in an international sex trafficking operation, the FBI and Justice Department issued a memo last July saying that they planned no further charges and no further information on their investigations of Epstein.
But last November, responding to victims’ calls for accountability, Congress overwhelmingly passed a law requiring the department to release the files within 30 days, while protecting victims’ names and revealing the names of pedophiles and other perpetrators.
In a blatant conflict of interest, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche took over compliance with the law, even though he had previously served as Trump’s criminal defense lawyer. Unlike previous presidents, Trump, whose name appears in the Epstein files, asserts the right to control the department.
Last July, Blanche took the unusual step of meeting with Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for her role in the Epstein scandal. Maxwell, who is seeking clemency from Trump, told Blanche she had never seen Trump act inappropriately. Trump has been asked repeatedly whether he plans to pardon Maxwell. He has not publicly ruled it out.
In December, Blanche failed to comply with the law’s deadline for making the Epstein files public. To date, the department has released only 3.5 million documents. Contrary to the law, they revealed more than 40 victims’ names, some with addresses, social security numbers, driver’s licenses, and unredacted nude photos. Blanche says the Justice Department will not release the remaining 2.5 million documents.
To be clear, Trump denies all allegations against him contained in the Epstein files. He has not been charged with any wrongdoing. The Justice Department warns that the documents — which contain allegations of not only pedophilia, sexual assaults and beatings but also torture, forced abortions and even murder by Epstein or his associates — include many unverified, politically motivated and false claims.
The New York Times found that references to Trump appear 38,000 times across more than 5,300 documents made public so far. The department’s decision not to release the remaining documents has led to predictable speculation that they contain particularly scandalous allegations about the president and other high-ranking people.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, whose impassioned oratory and populist vision of a “rainbow coalition” of the poor and forgotten made him the nation’s most influential Black figure in the years between the civil rights crusades of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the election of Barack Obama, died on Tuesday. He was 84.
His death was confirmed by his family in a statement, which said that Mr. Jackson “died peacefully” but did not give a cause or say where he died.
Mr. Jackson was hospitalized in November for treatment of a rare and particularly severe neurodegenerative condition, progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), according to the advocacy organization he founded, the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. In 2017, he announced that he had Parkinson’s disease, which in its early stages can produce similar effects on bodily movements and speech.
[. . .]
With his gospel of seeking common ground, his pleas to “keep hope alive” and his demands for respect for those seldom accorded it, Mr. Jackson, particularly in his galvanizing speeches at the Democratic conventions in 1984 and 1988, enunciated a progressive vision that defined the soul of the Democratic Party, if not necessarily its policies, in the last decades of the 20th century.
It was a vision, animated by the civil rights era, in which an inclusive coalition of people of color and others who had been at the periphery of American life would now move to the forefront and transform it.
Jackson’s dual bids for the Democratic presidential nomination inspired Black America and stunned political observers who marveled at his ability to draw White voters. He was a Black crossover figure long before Barack Obama hit the national stage.
Jackson first rose to national prominence in the 1960s as a close aide to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. After King’s assassination in 1968, Jackson became one of the most transformative civil rights leaders in America — to the chagrin of some of King’s aides, who thought he was too brash.
But his Rainbow Coalition, a bold alliance of Blacks, Whites, Latinos, Asian Americans, Native Americans and LGBTQ people, helped pave the way for a more progressive Democratic Party.
“Our flag is red, white and blue, but our nation is a rainbow – red, yellow, brown, Black and White – and we’re all precious in God’s sight,” Jackson once said.
One of Jackson’s signature phrases was “Keep hope alive.” He repeated it so often that some began to parody it, but it never seemed to lose meaning for him. He was a force for social justice over three eras: the Jim Crow period, the civil rights era and the post-civil rights era that culminated with the election of Obama and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Through his eloquence and singular drive, Jackson didn’t just keep hope alive for himself. His dream of a vibrant, multiracial America still inspires millions of Americans today.
Jackson’s vision remade the Democratic Party. He was the first presidential candidate to make support for gay rights a major part of his campaign platform, and he made a concerted effort to challenge the Democratic Party’s prioritization of White, moderate, middle-class voters, says David Masciotra, author of “I Am Somebody: Why Jesse Jackson Matters.”
“A Democratic party that now represents a multicultural America and has someone like Kamala Harris as the (former) Vice President and Obama as the former President began in many ways with those Jackson campaigns,” Masciotra says.
In 2000, Clinton awarded Jackson the Presidential Medal of Freedom, citing his decades of work to make the world a better place.
"It's hard to imagine how we could have come as far as we have without the creative power, the keen intellect, the loving heart, and the relentless passion of Jesse Lewis Jackson," Clinton said.
Trahern Crews, who helped found the Black Lives Matter-Minnesota chapter, said he grew up with Jackson's "I am Somebody" recitations ringing in his ears. Jackson often led crowds in a call-and-answer chant that usually included variations on "I may be poor … but I am … Somebody. I may be young … but I am … Somebody."
"That allowed future generations to stand up and follow and his footsteps and declare Black Lives Matter and recognize our humanity," Crews said. "When we go back and watch videos of Rev. Jesse Jackson marching and fighting for housing rights, voting rights, ending housing discrimination and said 'I am Somebody,' that encouraged activists of today to stand up and fight against 400 years of racist policies in the United States."