The Morning Call

Some DOJ credibilit­y needed in Epstein case

- Leonard Pitts

Jeffrey Epstein didn’t commit suicide.

He was murdered by Hillary and/or Bill Clinton. Or he was assassinat­ed by the Russians. Or Donald Trump killed him. Or he isn’t dead at all, having been spirited into the Witness Protection Program, where he presumably now shares an island mansion with Tupac Shakur and 84-year-old Elvis Presley. Take your pick. Epstein’s apparent suicide while in federal custody Saturday has spawned no shortage of conspiracy theories about what “really” happened to the wealthy financier who stood accused of sex-traffickin­g children on an industrial scale. Twitter and Facebook have been ablaze with such rot, some of it spread by people — MSNBC host Joe Scarboroug­h, for example — you’d think would know better. One person you absolutely know doesn’t know better — Trump — also got in on the act, retweeting a claim that the Clintons did it.

All these theories, should it be necessary to say, are based on precisely zero evidence. Not that you’d know that from the certainty with which they are stated. “He finally killed someone on 5th Avenue,” tweeted actress Debra Messing. The idea of raising questions, pushing for authoritat­ive answers and, from them, drawing informed conclusion­s, seems to have occurred to almost no one.

In a time such as this, it’d be good to have a credible investigat­or who could be counted upon to dig out the truth. Instead, we have Attorney General William Barr, and if there was ever a time he might have fit the bill, it was before he turned the Department of Justice into Trump’s private law firm. In his mishandlin­g of the Mueller report, abandoning his post as the nation’s lawyer to install himself as Trump’s defense counsel, Barr sacrificed his credibilit­y and that of his department.

Too bad. We could use a little credibilit­y right about now.

But you investigat­e with the DOJ you have, not with the DOJ you wish you had. So Barr is what we’re left with to probe what he called “failures” and “irregulari­ties” at the Bureau of Prisons — which he oversees — that allowed Epstein to kill himself after reportedly failing at a similar attempt a couple weeks before.

The immediate tragedy here is that the women who once saw him use his political clout to arrange a negligible punishment for his crimes, have again been robbed of their right to have him answer for what he did to them. The “justice” system has failed them at every step.

But Epstein’s death is also a body blow to the public trust. And the public trust can’t take much more. Not with the most prodigious liar in history as president, not with the nation’s political discourse flooded with falsehoods from cablenews prevaricat­ors, website exaggerato­rs, socialmedi­a fabricator­s. Not with the rise of so-called deepfakes that will make lies seamless and hightech until it is ever more difficult every day to know that you know what you know. And a nation that cannot even agree on what the facts are is a nation that loses cohesion, loses the very ability to act as a nation.

There are hard questions to ask about Epstein’s death. There are good reasons for suspicion. But there is no basis upon which to draw even a preliminar­y conclusion of anyone’s malfeasanc­e.

Likewise, it’s fair to wonder whether our compromise­d attorney general will be able to find the truth. There is, however, a bigger question here, and it speaks to the perilous state — and future — of the Union. In an era where reality itself is under siege and the public trust is reeling, you have to ask: Would we recognize the truth as such if he found it?

Indeed, would we even care?

It’s fair to wonder whether our compromise­d attorney general will be able to find the truth.

Tribune Content Agency

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