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Epstein’s ‘Special Access’ Email Raises Alarming Questions for Disney

Newly released documents from the Department of Justice include a December 2013 email in which Jeffrey Epstein told physicist Lawrence Krauss, “i have specila access dpn’t wory,” while discussing Disney tickets — a line that, at minimum, should trigger questions from the company and from every American who expects institutions to protect children, not accommodate predators. The line appears in Data Set 9 of the DOJ’s Epstein disclosures and has been picked up in recent reporting as part of the torrent of files made public under the Epstein Files disclosures.

Let’s be clear about the narrow, undeniable fact: the phrase is Epstein’s own words in his private correspondence, not a corporate memo from Disney granting favors. The released pages do not show Disney personnel confirming any special treatment, and the record as published so far offers only Epstein’s claim in a private thread about logistics. That distinction matters legally, but it should not calm our political outrage or the demand for answers.

Americans should not be placated by phrasing or by bureaucratic hedging. When a man who trafficked children brags about “special access” to places where families and kids are supposed to be safe, institutions with national brands owe the public transparency and a full accounting — not silence or equivocation. If Disney has nothing to hide, it should say so plainly and release any records that show what, if anything, Epstein was actually offered.

The documents in question were made public as part of the post-Epstein push for transparency driven by Congress and the Justice Department’s phased releases under the Epstein Files disclosures, a process born of bipartisan outrage and the Epstein Files Transparency Act. That law and the DOJ’s own archive show we are dealing with millions of pages, many redactions, and a history of institutional failures that demand oversight and reform.

This single email also fits a pattern in the records: Epstein repeatedly telegraphed influence, claimed proximity to powerful people and institutions, and used those claims as leverage even when independent confirmation is thin or absent. The broader trove shows a man who cultivated access and presented himself as someone who could open doors — and that posture alone should make corporate boards, university presidents, and political leaders shiver and explain what guardrails they had in place.

But let us not kid ourselves: the real scandal here is not just what Epstein said, it is how an entire elite ecosystem — the press corps, institutions, and sometimes the halls of power — shrugs, obfuscates, or buries uncomfortable details until conservatives, citizens, and victims scream loud enough to force action. The people who run these institutions owe working Americans accountability, not PR spin. Conservative patriots will keep pushing until families and children come before celebrity access and corporate convenience.

This is a test of character for America’s corporate titans and regulatory guardians. We will not accept platitudes. We demand the truth for victims, the full release of records that can responsibly be made public, and real consequences for anyone who enabled a predator through silence or influence. If Disney, the DOJ, or any other power center has questions to answer, now is the time to answer them — for the sake of justice and for the safety of our children.

Written by Staff Reports

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