Redacted Report Podcast

Redacted Report

Exploring power, secrecy and influence Linktr.ee/redactedreport redactedreport.substack.com

  1. Mar 28

    Britney's DUI, Secret Neighbors, and the Hollywood Silence Machine: What They're Not Telling You

    Let’s talk about what’s really happening here — because the mainstream media is going to spin this as a feel-good celebrity neighbor story, and I am NOT going to let that slide. Britney Spears just got hit with a DUI arrest March, 2026. That’s not gossip. That’s a woman in crisis. And what does Hollywood do? They trot out AJ McLean from the Backstreet Boys at the iHeartRadio Music Awards to tell Page Six that he ‘always gives her a hug.’ A HUG. That’s the support system? A neighbor with good vibes? Think about this. Britney spent over a decade under a conservatorship that the courts, her family, and the entertainment industry allowed to happen. She was legally not considered capable of controlling her own life. And now that she’s ‘free’ — she’s arrested, struggling, and the best the industry can offer is a quote from AJ McLean on a red carpet? Meanwhile, Lionel Richie is out here publicly shaming celebrities who ignore their fans — saying ‘I hope you like people’ like some kind of moral authority. But where is that same energy for Britney? Where is the industry accountability? Where are the powerful people who profited off her for DECADES? And then there’s the royals. Liz Truss — the woman who held the job of British Prime Minister for 45 days, the same 45 days Queen Elizabeth II died — is now casually throwing shade at Harry and Meghan, saying California can keep them. This is the same political establishment that many believe actively worked to push Harry and Meghan OUT of the royal family. And now leaked sourcing wars are happening inside Harry’s camp, with fingers pointing at biographer Tom Bower as the mole feeding stories to Variety. Leaks. Silence. Controlled narratives. Sound familiar? Here’s what connects all of this: the entertainment and political elite operate the same way. They build you up, extract everything they can, and when you start to crack — they send a neighbor to give you a hug and move on. Britney’s story isn’t over. And something tells me the full picture of what happened to her — and who allowed it — hasn’t been told yet. Dig into the documents. Follow the money. And stay subscribed — because next week, we’re going deeper into who really controlled Britney’s world, and the names might surprise you. Want to go deeper? Visit us at https://theredactedreport.com for more stories they don’t want you to see. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    1 min
  2. Mar 19

    CIA Experiment That Created ISIS

    There are moments in history that don’t just shock you — they echo. What you’re watching now… feels like one of them. This video circulates. Allegations of abuse so severe they leave permanent damage — broken ribs, internal injuries, emergency surgery just to survive. Then the detail that sticks in your throat: no accountability. Charges dropped. Silence. And if something about this feels familiar… it should. Because we’ve seen this before. The Echo of Abu Ghraib Back in the early 2000s, images from Abu Ghraib prison spread across the world. Prisoners humiliated. Tortured. Dehumanized. At the time, it was framed as a scandal — a few bad actors, a breakdown in discipline. But years later, deeper layers came out. Reports, investigations, and declassified material revealed something more calculated behind parts of the detention and interrogation system. Psychologists were brought in. Techniques were systematized. Methods were tested. Whether you call it “enhanced interrogation,” psychological conditioning, or something darker — the result was the same: Human beings pushed past the breaking point. What Happens After the Breaking Point? Violence doesn’t just end when the abuse stops. It mutates. Many analysts and researchers have pointed out a disturbing pattern: environments of extreme detention and abuse have historically acted as incubators — places where resentment, trauma, and ideology collide. * Trauma radicalizes * Humiliation fuels identity * Violence reshapes belief systems * And shared suffering builds networks In Iraq, prisons became networking hubs. People who entered as individuals left with connections, purpose, and rage. That’s not speculation — that’s been documented by journalists, military analysts, and former officials alike. So when a this video surfaces… When a detainee is sexually and physically abused resulting in severe injury…. When accountability disappears… The question isn’t just “what happened here?” The real question is: What does this create next? Because history suggests something uncomfortable: Not every consequence shows up immediately. Some take years. Here’s the pattern: * Abuse happens * It’s justified, denied, or ignored * Victims carry trauma forward * That trauma spreads through communities * New cycles of violence emerge And then — years later — the world acts shocked when a new extremist movement appears out of nowhere. Except it didn’t come from nowhere. Why This Matters Now You don’t have to believe in conspiracies to recognize patterns. You don’t have to connect every dot to see the outline forming. What you’re witnessing isn’t just a single incident. It’s a moment inside a much larger cycle — one that has repeated across different countries, conflicts, and decades. And the most unsettling part? If the pattern holds… The consequences won’t be felt today. They’ll be felt later. By people who had nothing to do with the original moment. This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    1 min
  3. Feb 12

    The FBI May Be Helping to Cover Up Prince Andrew’s Alleged Role in the Epstein Scandal

    In the mid-2000s, as Jeffrey Epstein was being investigated in Palm Beach, Florida, one of the deputies inside the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office was John Mark Dougan. A decade later, Dougan would flee the United States, resurface in Russia and receive asylum. Along the way, he claimed to possess internal Epstein files — copies of digital records, videos, and investigative material from the original 2008 case. He has said that the FBI may be helping to cover up Prince Andrew’s alleged role in the Epstein sexual abuse scandal. The Palm Beach Investigation John Mark Dougan served as a deputy with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office from roughly 2005 to 2009. During that time, the department investigated Jeffrey Epstein for sexually abusing underage girls. That investigation ultimately resulted in Epstein’s controversial 2008 federal non-prosecution agreement — often referred to as a “sweetheart deal” — which allowed him to plead guilty to state charges and serve a short sentence with work-release privileges. The agreement was negotiated and approved by Alexander Acosta, who was then the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Nearly a decade later, in 2017, Acosta was appointed U.S. Secretary of Labor under President Donald Trump. He resigned from that position in 2019 after Epstein’s federal arrest renewed scrutiny over the 2008 plea agreement. Dougan has since claimed that during his time at the department, he made copies of internal materials related to the Epstein investigation — including digital files, reports, and other evidence. Those claims have never been independently verified through public release of documents. FBI Investigation and Flight In 2016, Dougan was under FBI investigation on charges related to hacking and extortion. According to federal authorities, he had allegedly accessed and distributed confidential law enforcement information. Rather than face prosecution, Dougan fled the United States. He reportedly drove to Canada and then boarded a flight to Russia. The timing was notable. It was 2016 — a year marked by: * The U.S. presidential election * Heightened scrutiny of Russian interference in American politics * Increased focus on digital disinformation operations Shortly after arriving in Russia, Dougan was granted asylum. Life in Russia Once in Russia, Dougan began operating online under aliases. U.S. authorities and investigative reports later linked him to a network of websites that allegedly pushed disinformation narratives targeting Western audiences. According to U.S. indictments and intelligence assessments, some of these operations were allegedly connected to Russian influence campaigns. Dougan has denied wrongdoing and has portrayed himself as a whistleblower persecuted by U.S. authorities. Public reporting has tied him to the operation of numerous websites presenting themselves as independent news outlets. U.S. officials have alleged that such networks were part of broader efforts to amplify divisive political content. These allegations have been detailed in federal charging documents and intelligence briefings, though the full scope of operational control and funding remains part of ongoing geopolitical disputes. The Epstein Files Claim Central to Dougan’s notoriety is his repeated claim that he possesses internal Epstein investigation materials from his time in Palm Beach. Over the years, he has: * Claimed to have copies of investigative records * Teased information about prominent individuals * Suggested he holds damaging material However, no comprehensive public release has ever materialized. No verified trove of Epstein evidence from Dougan has been authenticated by major investigative outlets. This leaves a significant gap between claim and proof. The Broader Context The Epstein case has generated intense scrutiny because of its connections to powerful individuals across politics, finance, academia, and royalty. The original Palm Beach investigation — and the 2008 plea deal — has itself been the subject of Department of Justice review and widespread criticism. That history gives weight to any claim of unreleased evidence. * If Dougan possesses authentic Epstein files, why have they not been released in full? * If he does not, why continue to claim that he does? * If sensitive investigative materials were copied from within a sheriff’s office, what does that say about the chain of custody during one of the most controversial criminal cases in recent history? The Epstein story continues to produce fragments — claims, leaks, court documents, indictments, and intelligence assessments — but rarely complete clarity. John Mark Dougan sits at the intersection of three volatile subjects: * The original Epstein prosecution * U.S.–Russia geopolitical conflict * The modern information war Whether he is a whistleblower, a fugitive seeking protection, a propagandist, or some combination of all three depends largely on which documents one trusts — and which remain unseen. Until verifiable evidence is produced, the most important distinction remains this: Claims are not proof. But in the Epstein saga, even the claims have proven powerful enough to reshape headlines across continents. This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    2 min
  4. Feb 12

    Ghislaine Maxwell Father Robert Maxwell Israel's Superspy | Epstein Files

    Before Jeffrey Epstein became a household name, before Ghislaine Maxwell stood trial in a Manhattan courtroom, there was another story—one that began in war-torn Europe and ended in the Atlantic Ocean. To understand the Epstein network in its global context, many observers look backward—to Robert Maxwell. This is the documented history of his life, his empire, the McGraw-Hill chapter, the intelligence allegations, and the unanswered questions that still linger. Robert Maxwell — Biographical Overview Full Name:Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch Born:June 10, 1923Slatinské Doly, Czechoslovakia Died:November 5, 1991 (age 68)Atlantic Ocean near the Canary Islands, Spain Resting Place:Mount of Olives Jewish Cemetery, Jerusalem Political Career Member of Parliament for BuckinghamOctober 15, 1964 – May 29, 1970Preceded by Sir Frank MarkhamSucceeded by Sir Bill BenyonPolitical Party: Labour Party (UK) Citizenship * Czechoslovak * Israeli * French * British (1946–1991) Occupation PublisherMedia ProprietorBusinessman Military Service Served in: * Czechoslovak Army * British Army Years of Service: 1940–1945Rank: CaptainConflict: World War IIAward: Military Cross Personal Life Spouse: Elisabeth Meynard (married 1945)Children: Nine, including Christine, Isabel, Ian, Kevin, and Ghislaine Maxwell 1923–1945: From the Holocaust to the British Army Robert Maxwell was born Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch in 1923 in what was then Czechoslovakia (now Ukraine), into an Orthodox Jewish family. When Nazi Germany occupied the region, most of his family perished in Auschwitz. Maxwell fled, eventually making his way to France and then to Britain. He joined the British Army during World War II, serving with distinction and reportedly participating in the liberation of concentration camps. After the war, he reinvented himself. He adopted the name Robert Maxwell and began building a new identity in Britain—ambitious, charismatic, and relentlessly driven. 1950s–1960s: The Birth of a Publishing Empire Maxwell entered publishing by acquiring Pergamon Press in 1951, focusing on scientific and academic journals. At a time when postwar academia was expanding rapidly, Maxwell recognized the value of controlling scientific distribution channels. Pergamon became highly profitable. By the 1960s, Maxwell was wealthy, politically connected, and increasingly influential. In 1964, he was elected as a Labour Member of Parliament in the UK. He cultivated relationships across governments, academia, and media institutions. 1970s Maxwell’s ambitions expanded far beyond scientific journals. He began acquiring newspapers and media outlets. He presented himself as a larger-than-life media baron—a competitor to Rupert Murdoch. But his empire was built on aggressive financing. Maxwell frequently relied on debt to fuel expansion. 1984–1991: The McGraw-Hill Chapter One of the most significant moments in Maxwell’s corporate expansion came in 1984. That year, Robert Maxwell acquired control of McGraw-Hill’s education and publishing operations in the United Kingdom. While he did not own the entire American McGraw-Hill corporation, he gained substantial control over McGraw-Hill’s British textbook and publishing interests, integrating them into his Maxwell Communication Corporation. This acquisition strengthened his grip over global educational publishing markets. By the late 1980s, Maxwell controlled: * Pergamon Press * Mirror Group Newspapers (including the Daily Mirror) * Macmillan Publishers (U.S.) * Significant McGraw-Hill UK educational publishing assets * Numerous international media holdings He was no longer just a publisher. He was a transatlantic media magnate. But behind the scenes, financial instability was mounting. Allegations of Intelligence Connections Throughout the 1980s, rumors swirled about Maxwell’s alleged intelligence ties. Journalists and former intelligence officials later claimed that Maxwell had connections to Israeli intelligence, specifically Mossad. Some alleged he acted as a conduit for information or assisted in influence operations through his media empire. These claims were never formally proven in court. However, after his death, several former Israeli officials publicly praised him, and investigative reporting in subsequent years—including by respected outlets—referenced long-standing allegations of his cooperation with Israeli intelligence services. It remains an area of contested historical interpretation: documented claims, but no formal adjudication. November 1991 On November 5, 1991, Robert Maxwell disappeared from his yacht, the Lady Ghislaine, named after his youngest daughter. The official ruling: accidental drowning. Few believed it was that simple. In the weeks following his death, a far larger scandal emerged. The Pension Fraud Investigators discovered that Maxwell had secretly siphoned hundreds of millions of pounds from his companies’ employee pension funds to prop up his failing empire. It was one of the largest corporate fraud scandals in British history. His media empire collapsed almost overnight. Employees lost retirement savings. Companies were dismantled. The myth of the unstoppable tycoon disintegrated. Burial in Jerusalem Maxwell was buried on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem with high-level Israeli attendance. Prominent Israeli leaders, including then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and future Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, attended or sent tributes. Reports later noted that several individuals associated with Israeli intelligence were present at the funeral. For some observers, that reinforced suspicions of intelligence ties. For others, it reflected his longstanding public support for Israel and philanthropy. 1991–1992: Ghislaine Maxwell Arrives in New York Within months of her father’s death and the financial collapse of his empire, Ghislaine Maxwell relocated to New York City. Shortly thereafter, she appeared publicly alongside Jeffrey Epstein. The exact timing of their initial meeting has been debated. Some accounts suggest they met in the early 1990s, possibly even before Robert Maxwell’s death. Others suggest the relationship formed immediately afterward. What is documented: * By the mid-1990s, Ghislaine Maxwell was closely associated with Epstein. * She became socially integrated into elite Manhattan circles. * Multiple court documents and trial testimony later described her as instrumental in recruiting and grooming victims for Epstein. She was convicted in 2021 on federal charges related to sex trafficking conspiracy. The Unanswered Question About Epstein One persistent question remains central to public fascination: How did Jeffrey Epstein—without a completed college degree, without a clear institutional power base, and with an opaque financial history—gain access to: * Billionaires * Royalty * Scientists * Politicians * Media moguls Epstein cultivated relationships across continents. Some believe his influence stemmed purely from financial maneuvering and social engineering. Others suspect intelligence entanglements. Official investigations have never publicly concluded that he was an intelligence operative. But the scale of his access remains extraordinary. Was There a Hand-Off? Speculation persists that Ghislaine Maxwell may have introduced Epstein to powerful networks her father cultivated. There is no public evidence proving she was “handed” to Epstein as an asset, nor that Epstein was her handler, or the other way around. However, the proximity of events raises questions for many observers: * 1991: Robert Maxwell dies amid scandal. * 1992: Ghislaine relocates to New York. * Mid-1990s: Epstein and Maxwell operate as a powerful social duo. * 2000s: A global trafficking and blackmail operation emerges. Correlation is not proof of coordination. But the timeline fuels speculation. A Global Scandal, Not a National One What became clear in the Epstein investigations is that this was not confined to one country. The network touched: * The United States * The United Kingdom * France * The Caribbean * The Middle East It intersected with finance, academia, politics, and royalty. Whether intelligence agencies were involved remains unproven. But the international nature of the network is indisputable. The Broader Context Robert Maxwell’s life story contains all the elements of a 20th-century epic: * Holocaust survival * Wartime heroism * Political ascent * Media dominance * Corporate fraud * Mysterious death His daughter’s later association with Jeffrey Epstein connects that story to one of the most disturbing criminal cases of the 21st century. The documented facts are substantial. This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    2 min
  5. Feb 10

    Daphne Barak: Insider Behind Trump, Epstein, Maxwell, Ehud Barak

    When you look at the most talked‑about figures in global scandals of the last three decades — from world leaders to socialites at the center of criminal cases — there’s one name most people have never heard of, yet her fingerprints show up again and again: Daphne Barak. Daphne Barak isn’t a household name. She doesn’t headline major news networks. Yet for decades she’s operated in the rarefied space where journalism, celebrity, and access to powerful figures collide — often in ways that raise as many questions as answers. Daphne Barak is a figure with complex connections. She is a cousin of Ehud Barak, former Prime Minister of Israel. Ehud Barak’s documented interactions with Jeffrey Epstein—including meetings after Epstein’s 2008 conviction—have drawn scrutiny. Daphne Barak has a long history of securing exclusive interviews with prominent figures, including sitting down with Michael Jackson’s parents, Joe and Katherine Jackson, during the media storm of his 2004‑05 trial—material that became the documentary Our Son: Michael Jackson, which aired internationally and was produced rapidly after his indictment. Barak also directed and released the documentary Trump vs Hollywood in 2020, a feature‑length film built from interviews she conducted with 24 Hollywood personalities and entertainers about their views on Donald Trump and the political divide in America. In To Plea or Not to Plea, Barak explores why Gates chose to take a plea deal rather than go to trial, detailing his work in the Trump campaign alongside Paul Manafort and how the legal pressures of the Mueller probe led him to plead guilty to federal charges as a way to protect himself and his family. While she hasn’t conducted public, sit‑down interviews with Donald Trump in a traditional broadcast sense, her film includes voices from the entertainment world discussing Trump’s impact, and she has spoken publicly about the project’s themes and its connections to Trump’s circle. Across her career, Barak’s interview library has also included major figures in music and politics—her archive reportedly holds footage of conversations with stars including Whitney Houston and others, part of a trove she’s explored for future books and media projects. The Barak Web Daphne Barak & Epstein Prince Andrew Daphne Barak, the journalist who exposed emails exchanged between Jeffrey Epstein and Prince Andrew in 2011, joins NewsNation to discuss the disgraced former royal’s titles being removed. Feb 6, 2026: Journalist Daphne Barak weighs in on the latest revelations surrounding disgraced Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and his ties to Jeffrey Epstein. Barak first exposed the former prince’s emails to Jeffrey Epstein in 2011 and proved he lied to the public about cutting contact with the pedophile. “No surprises for me, but I am as devastated and shocked as you and everybody else,” Ms Barak told Sky News host Danica De Giorgio. Ghislaine Maxwell Daphne Barak conducted an exclusive interview with Ghislaine Maxwell from prison, where Maxwell discussed her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, expressed regret and called meeting him “the greatest mistake of my life.” This interview was referenced on CBS Mornings, with Barak identified as the interviewer.👉 Ghislaine Maxwell says meeting Jeffrey Epstein was “greatest mistake of my life” (CBS News clip) Maxwell Behind Bars — TalkTV / Jeremy Kyle Special Maxwell’s prison interview with Barak was used for a broadcast special on TalkTV (“Ghislaine Behind Bars”), where Maxwell spoke from the Tallahassee Federal Correctional Institution about life in prison, her relationship with Epstein, Prince Andrew, and other aspects of her story.👉 How to watch Jeremy Kyle’s ‘Ghislaine Behind Bars’ interview Daphne Barak also appeared in a 2022 YouTube interview on the Nexus channel discussing her exclusive behind‑bars recordings with Maxwell. In that segment she talked about Maxwell’s views on Prince Andrew imagery and the potential for further interviews.👉 Ghislaine Maxwell talks from prison! Plus new Epstein lawsuits (Nexus) In other segments published internationally (e.g., in the Daily Mail and other outlets), Maxwell appeared to defend acquaintances like Prince Andrew, discuss personal friendships with powerful figures, and push back against some widely reported details about her prior behavior. Various news outlets referenced Barak’s jailhouse interview when reporting on Maxwell’s demeanor and statements about Epstein or appeals. For example, Fox News showed clips describing Barak’s impressions of Maxwell’s lack of remorse. While these are not individual interviews conducted by Barak, they are broadcasts of material she gathered in her jailhouse conversations with Maxwell. Some documentary segments associated with Barak’s Maxwell interviews included conversations with Maxwell’s former security adviser about efforts to conceal her location after Epstein’s death, and about how press access was managed leading up to her arrest. CBS News article and video featuring Matt Hellyer, Maxwell’s ex‑security adviser: “Ghislaine Maxwell’s security adviser speaks out: ‘She was the most hunted lady in the U.S., in the world’” 👉 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ghislaine-maxwell-security-adviser-see-it-now/ Who Is Daphne Barak? Daphne Barak is an Israeli‑American journalist, interviewer, author, documentary producer, and media personality whose career spans more than three decades. According to her official biography, Barak has conducted hundreds of exclusive interviews with a remarkably wide array of public figures — from heads of state to celebrities, musicians to politicians — and she owns what’s described as a massive library of filmed interviews dating back to the early 1990s. Daphne Barak is documented as having interviewed Mia Farrow as part of her wide archive of celebrity interviews. According to her official website’s biography list, Mia Farrow is included among the Hollywood stars she’s interviewed alongside other notable figures. Woody Allen and Mia Farrow’s relationship and highly publicized breakup have long been the subject of scrutiny, particularly surrounding allegations of sexual abuse with Mia Farrow’s daughter, Dylan Farrow, in the early 1990s. Beyond their personal controversies, Allen’s circle intersects indirectly with Jeffrey Epstein; multiple reports indicate that Epstein and Allen moved in overlapping social spheres in New York, attending some of the same elite events and parties. Daphne Barak’s professional work has been broadcast internationally, with her interviews distributed to media outlets across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and the United States. Barak has also extended her work into television specials and documentary production, including programs like Our Son Michael Jackson and Tale of Two Sisters (about Liza Minnelli and Lorna Luft), some produced with Elisabeth Murdoch. Barak’s stated portfolio is extraordinary in scope. Her biography lists sit‑down interviews with heads of state and major global leaders — including Nelson Mandela, Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres, and Benazir Bhutto — alongside numerous other influential figures. In the entertainment world, her work has included extended coverage or intimate conversations with icons and contentious personalities alike: * Amy Winehouse — Barak spent significant time with Winehouse and her family in St. Lucia, documenting the final period of the singer’s life. This material became the basis for her 2010 book Saving Amy, which has been optioned for film adaptation. * Ghislaine Maxwell — One of the most widely discussed works in recent years is Barak’s prison interview with Maxwell, the former socialite convicted for her role in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking network. Barak’s coverage included extensive conversations from Maxwell’s Florida prison, emphasizing conditions, personal reflections, and legal issues surrounding Maxwell’s appeals. More Daphne Barak Books Some of her most notable titles include: * Saving Amy — A memoir‑style account of her time with Amy Winehouse and the singer’s family, derived from months of interviews and footage. * My Benazir — A narrative about the final period in the life of former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. Both books have contributed to her reputation as an interviewer with unusually deep access — but not without controversy. Saving Amy, in particular, has been criticized for its tone and perspective, and legal disputes have arisen over proposed film adaptations based on the material. Barak’s documentaries have similarly stirred debate. While they have brought forward voices and moments others did not capture, critics have questioned her framing choices, editorial decisions, and relationships with subjects, particularly where sympathetic portrayals could influence public perception. A Network of Influence One of the most intriguing aspects of Daphne Barak’s profile is her family connection to Ehud Barak, the former Prime Minister and Defense Minister of Israel. While details about property transactions between them remain limited in public reporting, records and public discussion include claims that they co‑owned property in California, suggesting financial ties beyond mere familial relation. What is documented with greater clarity is the Ehud Barak’s association with Jeffrey Epstein. Ehud Barak has publicly acknowledged a relationship with Epstein that began in the early 2000s, including travel on Epstein’s private jet and meetings in New York and elsewhere — contacts that continued periodically until at least 2017. Barak has denied involvement in any of Epstein’s criminal activities, emphasizing that his interactions did not include what led to Epstein’s conviction. Barak’s prominence in global interviewing, combined

    2 min
  6. Feb 10

    Inside Israel’s ‘Esther Project’: The “Not Paid” U.S. Influencer Strategy

    U.S. social media influencers have been posting videos throughout 2025, describing their “honor” of meeting with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as part of a special focus group for Christian conservative Gen Z creators. On August 22, 2025, while independent international journalists were still largely barred from freely entering Gaza, a U.S. social media influencer (Xaviaer DuRousseau) affiliated with the Israel 365 program was granted access and used that access to post content claiming to show that food was available inside Gaza. The moment raised serious questions about who is allowed in, under what conditions, and for what purpose. When reporters documenting humanitarian conditions are restricted, but influencers participating in a state-backed PR initiative are permitted entry to film curated scenes, the issue is no longer access—it’s narrative control. This was not independent reporting. It was messaging, delivered through a trusted Gen Z influencer pipeline, at a time when the public was being told there was no safe or feasible way for journalists to verify conditions on the ground. At the time this content was posted, August 2025, two arguments were colliding in real time: one side asserting that food scarcity and mass starvation were occurring in Gaza, the other (Israel) insisting that aid and food were available and that claims of genocide were exaggerated or false. These were not abstract talking points—they were central to global legal, humanitarian, and political debates unfolding simultaneously in courts, governments, and public opinion. In that context, selectively showcasing food availability through an influencer granted controlled access carried outsized weight. When one visual narrative is amplified while independent verification is restricted, the footage doesn’t merely inform—it intervenes in an argument that was actively shaping whether the situation was being described as a humanitarian crisis, ethnic cleansing, or genocide. "Not Paid by Israel” These creators make a point to clarify that they are not paid or endorsed by Israel. That clarification deserves a closer look—not as a personal attack, but because it highlights a growing and largely misunderstood influence strategy that blends public diplomacy, social media, and Gen Z persuasion. Newly filed U.S. Justice Department disclosures reveal a sweeping, state-backed social media PR campaign targeting American audiences — including Gen Z influencers flown to Israel on funded trips and linked to a nearly $900,000 contract managed under a project code-named the “Esther Project.” * It is unclear if there is any link to Project Esther: A National Strategy to Combat Antisemitism In its disclosure, required under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, Bridges said its work was intended to “assist with promoting cultural interchange between the United States and Israel” The filings show how the Israeli government has quietly paid firms to recruit, coordinate, and produce content for influencers aimed at saturating U.S. feeds with pro-Israel narratives — all while participants insist they “weren’t paid.” Israel 365 Is Not a Rumor The 2025 trip in question was facilitated through Israel 365 Action, a program that is funded by the State of Israel and whose mission is openly stated: to influence public opinion about Israel, particularly among younger audiences. This is not speculation. Israel 365 Action publicly promotes initiatives designed to bring American influencers, faith leaders, and content creators to Israel on fully funded trips, where participants are guided through curated locations and briefed on talking points. These trips frequently include private or group meetings with Israeli political leadership, including the Prime Minister. The expectation is not subtle: participants return home and produce pro-Israel content, including videos, livestreams, and social media posts aimed at shaping sentiment—especially among Gen Z. Calling these trips “PR packages” is not an insult; it’s an accurate description of how modern state messaging works. “Not Paid” vs. “Not Compensated” This is where language matters. No one is claiming influencers are handed envelopes of cash. But compensation does not have to be a paycheck to be compensation. A fully funded international trip, exclusive political access, and content opportunities that boost reach, credibility, and monetization are all forms of material benefit. In influencer marketing—corporate or political—this is widely understood as compensation. Saying “I wasn’t paid” while omitting that airfare, lodging, access, and prestige were provided creates a misleading impression for audiences who may not understand how influencer partnerships actually work. AIPAC Is a Distraction in This Conversation These influencers also referenced AIPAC repeatedly, noting that it is a U.S.-based organization composed of American citizens. While AIPAC is not an Israeli government agency, it is widely recognized as one of the most influential lobbying groups in Washington, shaping discussions and policy around U.S.-Israel relations. However, AIPAC does not fund international influencer trips or social media campaigns—those are managed separately by state-backed programs like Israel 365. Conflating AIPAC with Israeli government–funded influencer efforts muddies the waters and distracts from the central issue: foreign governments directly shaping U.S. social media narratives through curated access to influencers. The “50 States, One Israel” Delegation In September 2025, Israel’s Foreign Ministry hosted a historic event called “50 States, One Israel,” inviting 250 American state legislators—five from each of the 50 U.S. states—to visit Jerusalem and beyond. The trip, held from September 14 to 18, was fully funded by the Israeli government, which paid for travel, accommodations, meals, and a guided itinerary that included meetings with senior leaders, visits to cultural and political sites, and symbolic activities such as planting 50 trees—one for each state. According to reports and official announcements, the delegation was the largest-ever group of U.S. elected officials to visit Israel at one time. Organizers cast the event as an opportunity to deepen ties between the United States and Israel, and included meetings with figures such as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli officials. State legislators described the experience in personal terms, noting that the trip offered a chance to see Israel firsthand, visit historically significant locations, and engage with Israeli leaders on issues ranging from security to shared democratic values. Critics pointed out that the timing of the delegation—amid ongoing conflict in GAZA and global scrutiny of Israel’s military actions—meant the visit also served as a high-profile display of solidarity and narrative framing, with lawmakers returning home having experienced a highly curated view of the situation. This event illustrates how foreign governments can use fully funded trips and curated experiences to bring U.S. policymakers onto their soil, offering access and perspective that may shape future public statements and legislative priorities. Whether framed as relationship‑building or influence‑seeking, the “50 States, One Israel” delegation represents one of the most ambitious examples of Israel’s engagement with American political figures in recent years. The Political Context Matters After the October 2023 Hamas attack, U.S. politics entered a period of visible internal conflict—particularly within the Democratic Party—over Israel and Gaza. In the 2024 primary cycle, outside groups spent roughly $38.4 million across races. Nearly two-thirds of that spending came from organizations backing candidates with strong pro-Israel positions, often opposing candidates who questioned U.S. policy toward Gaza. That context helps explain why Gen Z messaging has become such a high priority. Younger Americans are more skeptical, more online, and less aligned with traditional foreign policy narratives. Influencers are now a frontline strategy. This Is About Transparency, Not Loyalty None of this requires believing in conspiracies. It requires acknowledging reality. Israel is transparent about funding programs that bring U.S. influencers and policymakers to Israel. Influencers openly post content showing their visits and often share pro-Israel messages upon returning home. Similarly, government officials return and participate in public events or make statements reflecting their experiences. Yet, audiences are often led to believe these messages are organic, rather than part of curated, state-backed initiatives designed to shape perception. Transparency does not mean influencers or lawmakers cannot support Israel. It means audiences deserve to know when content or legislation is produced within a structured program backed by a foreign government. Ahead of the 2024 election cycle and amid growing public scrutiny over Israel’s war in Gaza, AIPAC announced it would spend $100 million on U.S. elections through its United Democracy Project and AIPAC PAC—roughly one-sixth of what outside groups spent in the 2020 presidential race. The organization was active in nearly every corner of the contest: of 469 congressional seats up for reelection, AIPAC spent in 389 races, including 363 House seats and 26 Senate races. Many of these candidates faced no opposition, with 57 running unchallenged in primaries and 88 facing no general election opponent, giving AIPAC a broad reach into the electoral landscape. The Bottom Line This is not a rumor.This is not antisemitism.This is not solely about AIPAC. It’s not just about elections—Israel is running state-funded initiatives designed to recruit American social media creators and lawmakers, provide them with curated access, an

    1 min
  7. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche Defends Release of Epstein Documents

    Feb 9

    Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche Defends Release of Epstein Documents

    Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche defended the decision to make a massive set of investigative files linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein publicly available, despite growing backlash from survivors and advocates who say the release was flawed and incomplete. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche appeared on national television over the weekend to address concerns about the department’s disclosure of more than three million pages of documents from its long-running Epstein investigations. Blanche said the department worked carefully to shield victims’ identities and personal information, and that any redaction mistakes reported by survivors would be promptly corrected. “Our process was designed to protect those who suffered abuse, and when concerns are brought to our attention, we act on them immediately,” Blanche told ABC’s “This Week.” He insisted the errors represented a tiny fraction of the material released and reaffirmed that the department is trying to balance transparency with privacy protections. Blanche also acknowledged that the extensive review of Epstein-related records — which include documents, photographs, videos and other materials spanning multiple investigations — had concluded following this latest release, despite criticism that millions of pages remain off-limits or heavily redacted. However, survivors and their representatives say the DOJ’s handling of the files falls far short of full transparency and justice. A group of survivors issued a statement saying that names and identifying details of victims appeared in documents that should have been protected, and that the department failed to deliver on its legal duty to fully comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Advocates have urged further oversight, including calls for the Justice Department’s inspector general to take a more active role in reviewing the disclosures and future releases. Some survivors have also expressed frustration that important evidence — such as FBI interviews or surveillance footage from Epstein’s properties — has not yet surfaced in the public archive. Lawmakers from both parties have weighed in, with some questioning whether all relevant documents have truly been disclosed. Still, Blanche maintained that the department has met its obligations under the law and rejected suggestions that any material was withheld to protect powerful individuals mentioned in the files. As the dispute continues, victims’ advocates and some members of Congress are pushing for more comprehensive releases and independent oversight, while the department pledges to address redaction issues and provide greater clarity about the Epstein network and its wide-ranging implications. This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    1 min
  8. Feb 7

    The Epstein Scandal Is Taking Down Europe’s Political Class

    On January 30, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice released millions of pages of documents and communications connected to Jeffrey Epstein and his associates under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. What followed was not another cycle of gossip or conspiracy speculation. It quickly became a political earthquake, and its epicenter was not in Washington, D.C. — it was in Europe’s capitals. In just days, Europe’s political class — from former prime ministers to ambassadors and royalty — has been plunged into public scandal, investigations, or outright resignation. By contrast, the United States — where Epstein built much of his network — has seen only modest reputational fallout. That gap exposes more than a discrepancy in media coverage; it exposes a deeper divide in political culture, elite accountability, and institutional reaction. Europe’s High-Profile Exits and Legal Scrutiny Across Western and Northern Europe, the latest tranche of Epstein files has collapsed reputations and careers at a speed few expected. United Kingdom: Peter Mandelson and the Monarchy Under Pressure * Peter Mandelson, former Labour Party heavyweight and long-time power broker, resigned from the Labour Party and was removed as the UK’s ambassador to Washington after documents showed he received three payments totaling £55,000 in the early 2000s and maintained extensive contact with Epstein. He is now under criminal investigation by the Metropolitan Police and could face prosecution for misconduct in public office. * Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who appointed Mandelson, is facing a leadership crisis and intense criticism for his judgment in keeping Mandelson in high office amidst known Epstein ties. * Prince Andrew, Duke of York (Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor), already stripped of royal titles before these documents were released, has seen renewed scrutiny and police reviews of abuse claims tied to Epstein’s network. Calls for him to testify before U.S. authorities have grown louder. France: Jack Lang’s Resignation and Financial Probe * Jack Lang, former French culture minister and longtime president of the Arab World Institute, has offered his resignation amid revelations that his name appears more than 600 times in the files and that he corresponded frequently with Epstein over nearly a decade. French financial prosecutors have opened a probe into possible tax fraud and laundering related to his dealings. His daughter, Caroline Lang, also stepped down from her media role due to fallout. Norway: Royal Apology and High-Level Investigations * Crown Princess Mette-Marit publicly apologized for maintaining a friendship with Epstein after his 2008 conviction — even exchanging emails and visiting properties linked to him. * Thorbjørn Jagland, former prime minister, ex-chair of the Nobel Committee, and ex-Secretary General of the Council of Europe, is now under criminal investigation in Norway for suspected aggravated corruption tied to his communications and ties with Epstein. * Mona Juul, a veteran Norwegian diplomat, has been suspended pending investigation after files showed extensive contact with Epstein and indicated his estate left significant money to her children. * Børge Brende, current president of the World Economic Forum and former Norwegian foreign minister, faces scrutiny over his dinners and correspondence with Epstein and has had to publicly explain his interactions. 🇸🇰 Slovakia: National Security Adviser Quits * Miroslav Lajčák, Slovakia’s national security adviser and longtime diplomat, resigned after emails surfaced showing he exchanged personal messages with Epstein — including discussions about women — even though he denies wrongdoing. Elsewhere in Europe * Nations including Sweden, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland have launched formal inquiries into officials appearing in the files, and other resignations — such as Sweden’s Joanna Rubinstein — have occurred following revelations of private travel and correspondence. In a matter of days, Europe’s political ecosystem has been forced into a public reckoning. Even figures who are not accused of sexual misconduct but who maintained contact with Epstein after his conviction have found that their reputations are no longer invulnerable. United States: No Major Accountability Now contrast Europe’s upheaval with the United States — where the conversation remains notable for what isn’t happening. The released files include mentions of dozens of American elites — from political figures to business leaders and media personalities — yet almost none have faced serious legal or political consequences. Some High-Profile Mentions and Minor Fallout * Larry Summers, former Treasury Secretary and Harvard president, stepped back from some academic and public roles after his name appeared in the files. * Brad Karp, head of a major U.S. law firm, resigned following leaked communications. * John Phelan, U.S. Navy Secretary appointed by Donald Trump, was linked in flight logs showing he flew on Epstein’s private jet years before his government service — a revelation that has prompted internal Pentagon concerns, though no charges. * Promotional figures like Steve Bannon and business leaders including Elon Musk and Bill Gates appear in the files in various contexts, but their inclusion has yet to translate into meaningful legal jeopardy. Additionally, entertainers and activists — such as Sheryl Crow — have publicly criticized the lack of accountability for powerful Americans named in the documents, calling for prosecutions and a moral reckoning. But … Still No Major Legal or Political Fallout Despite names surfacing that are familiar, influential, and politically powerful, the U.S. has so far seen: * No federal investigations specifically targeting sitting or former U.S. lawmakers in connection with the files * No resignations from elected office due to Epstein associations * No sustained congressional inquiries with real consequences This is a striking contrast with Europe, where even friendly communications or social ties with Epstein — not allegations of criminal acts — have triggered resignations, investigations, and public pressure. Why the Disparity? Political Culture and Media Accountability European democracies — particularly in parliamentary systems — tend to respond quickly to perceived ethical breaches. Political survival often demands a rapid distancing from scandal, even if criminality isn’t established. Europe’s public media ecosystems have embraced robust scrutiny and relentless follow-ups. In the U.S., media attention is often fragmented and driven by partisan alignment. Stories that might unify in European capitals become polarized or distracted amid America’s broader news cycle, meaning scandals erode more quietly. There is simply less immediate pressure for elites to exit stage left. Institutional Priorities and Legal Structure Europe’s varied judicial and oversight systems permit faster administrative or political consequences — inquiries, resignations, and disciplinary actions — sometimes without waiting for long criminal proceedings. In the U.S., political accountability for scandals without explicit criminal charges usually requires years of investigation — a powerful buffer against short-term reputational damage. Elite Insulation and Sympathetic Networks Epstein’s network was global — and his influence pervasive. Yet in the U.S., many of his associates are themselves part of intellectual, financial, and political power structures, which can act as a form of insulation. Whether through delayed transparency or institutional protection, the U.S. elite class has so far avoided the same swift consequences seen abroad. What This Reveals About Power and Accountability The Epstein scandal — once a taboo subject — now serves as an unprecedented stress test for political systems around the world. In Europe, the pressure has been immediate, intense, and unforgiving. Governments, parties, and even monarchies have been forced into the spotlight, with measurable consequences for those whose names appear in the documents. In the United States, by contrast, the story is acknowledged but nmuch less punishing. Names are released; commentators debate their meaning — but no political class has been shaken to its core yet. That does not mean nothing will happen. But months into the file release, the gap in response is telling:Europe’s elites are being held to account — even for associations — while America’s elite largely remains untouched. And that disparity raises fundamental questions about power, privilege, and justice in our age. This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Redacted Report at redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe

    2 min

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