Zionist-Nazis US DOJ (Dept Pedophile Protection): How to legalize child rape and human trafficking – defund law enforcement to prevent investigation and prosecutions of such crimes. Not surprising from a sadistic wanna-be-king, reportedly involved in kid-rape snuff films, and serving Israel, pedophile safe haven.

@theserfstv:

Normalizing pedophilia is part of the far right projectand criminalize consent and legalize rape. Nazis/fascists/Trump’s Kid-Raping Regime hate women and girls – it’s a Christian thing, and Carney’s a Zionist Harper con catholic, so I expect this to come to Canada too – to appease the cruel orange blob.

@HacknerTyler:

Same people who demonize gay and trans people

@amirattaran.bsky.social‬:

Suddenly, seeing the Epstein files seems more relevant.

@czarmikhail.bsky.social‬:

‪@adjordan.bsky.social‬:

Trump’s been paving the way for human trafficking, with Republican lawmaker stamp of approval.

“Trump has aggressively rolled back efforts to combat human trafficking, including sex trafficking, and cut funding to support survivors of these crimes.”

‘Disheartening’: US justice department slashes funding to programs combating child sex trafficking, Prosecutors say cuts to funding and training limits their ability to bring child predators to justice by Katie McQue, 24 Jan 2026, The Guardian

The US Department of Justice has slashed funding and training resources for law enforcement working on investigations and prosecutions of sex crimes against children under the Trump administration, which limits their ability to carry out this work.

Major cuts include the cancelation of 2025 National Law Enforcement Training on Child Exploitation, due to be held in Washington DC in June. The conference is an annual event that provides technical training to prosecutors, state and federal law enforcement officers on investigating online crimes against children.

The sweeping cuts, enacted soon after Donald Trump began his second term as US president, are putting vulnerable children at risk and impeding efforts to bring child predators to justice, according to four prosecutors and law enforcement officers specializing in cases of child sexual exploitation, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

“You don’t want to speak too loudly, because you just fear retaliation, and that’s a heavy hand to be dealt when you’re just trying to do your job,” one prosecutor said.

Previous Guardian investigative reports have revealed that the Trump administration has aggressively rolled back efforts to combat human trafficking, including sex trafficking, and cut funding to support survivors of these crimes.

Federal prosecutors are now operating under new “austerity” measures, put into place by the justice department, creating roadblocks to prosecuting alleged child predators, sources said.That’s the Kid Raping Trump Regime is filled with pedophiles and rapists. Oh ya, and the religion of many of them – Christian Zionism, hates women and girls.

“We need to justify all travel for training, trial preparation and meeting with victims. We need to justify why it’s ‘core mission’, and the answer is almost always no,” said one federal prosecutor who specializes in crimes against children.

The 2025 National Law Enforcement Training on Child Exploitation was axed without explanation, law enforcement sources said. An announcement on a law enforcement association website states: “This event has NOT received US DOJ approval.”

“It hurts on a lot of levels,” said one officer with the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) taskforce, a national network of law enforcement agencies dedicated to combating online child exploitation. “If you’re not getting the training, it impacts the investigations, especially for new investigators.”

Attendance is critical for investigators to keep up with the fast pace of developments and software for obtaining and analyzing digital and forensic evidence, and other investigative techniques.

“If your jurisdiction gets hit with one of these cases, what do you do? These conferences teach you. They also provide contacts: I meet instructors who’ve handled these cases before, who can maybe talk me through the investigation,” said a state prosecutor. “Not having the conference really hinders our ability to kind of address new challenges as they come in.”

The conference provides a forum for law enforcement investigating child sexual abuse crimes to gain support from one another, which is especially important because of their deeply traumatic workload that also creates a high staff turnover, sources said.

“This is very isolating work. You can’t go home to tell your family what you did during the day. When you meet other people at these conferences, they’re in the same boat,” the state prosecutor added. “Building those bonds is essential to us staying in this work long term.”

Historically, the justice department meets with the commanders of the 61 ICAC taskforces, and the National Center of Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) and some tech companies meet three times each year to discuss cases of crimes against children. Yet these meetings have also been halted since the cancelation of the June conference, sources said.

“These meetings facilitate the flow of information so that all of us can have discussions around what’s going on in this space of work and how each of us can benefit from working together more efficiently to protect kids,” said one officer who is a member of ICAC.

ICAC divisions have also been hit by the non-payment of annual grants made to them by the justice department, which are usually awarded each October. This has left ICAC investigators without funding for critical personnel, software, hardware and other tools needed to investigate child exploitation.

“We’re left figuring out how to survive without it,” a law enforcement official said. We have had to make cuts, redo things, and go back to other funding sources to beg and plead for money.”

The justice department did not respond to a request for comment.of course not, fucking Department of Kid Rape and protect the orange kid rapist snuff film guy at all costs

Previously, a departmental spokesperson has said: “The Department of Justice can remain focused on two critical priorities at the same time: prosecute criminals who exploit children and ensure the efficient use of taxpayer dollars.”

Anti-trafficking advocates across the political spectrum praised many aspects of the first Trump administration’s work on these issues. Since his re-election, however, Trump and his appointees have shifted course. This had drawn bipartisan criticism, particularly over the refusal to release the full investigative files related to the late Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted child sex trafficker and former friend of Trump.

“Many law enforcement officers felt like this administration would be pro-law enforcement, and that trafficking investigations would be seen as important,” said a prosecutor. “This [situation] is disheartening.”

In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453 or visit their website for more resources and to report child abuse or DM for help. For adult survivors of child abuse, help is available at ascasupport.org. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Bravehearts on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines International

What else can be done to force Trump’s DoJ to release all the Epstein files? Legal experts weigh in, The deadline for Trump’s justice department to release the files came and went, but experts say there are still options by Victoria Bekiempis, 24 Jan 2026, The Guardian

For months, the 2025 news cycle was dominated by the disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

Public outrage over the continued secrecy surrounding Epstein investigative files – which Donald Trump failed to release fully early in his second term, despite campaign promises – was growing.

Federal lawmakers took matters into their own hands: they issued a spate of subpoenas related to the late child sex trafficker, releasing batches of files that renewed attention to his connections to high-profile individuals on both sides of the political spectrum. Congress ultimately passed legislation mandating that the Department of Justice release these files by 19 December, with Trump signing this bill into law.They just passed this legislation and Trump just signed the bill into law because they are Nazis, and know they just shit on the law.

But that deadline came and went, with Trump’s justice department making a mere fraction of the total disclosures required by the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). These scant releases have so far failed to lift the veil on how Epstein operated with impunity for years.

Now, the big Epstein-related news is that there is no major Epstein news. Nothing has happened of late that has meaningfully moved the needle toward transparency for victims and advocates, renewing questions about what comes next. Releases of new documents have ceased in recent weeks.

Legal experts told the Guardian that failed efforts to request an independent monitor for the files’ release – known as a special master – have underscored how potential litigation could try to force the justice department’s hand, but might not yield results given the department’s recent track record of seeming legal non-compliance.

‘Transparency has to be dragged out’

Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented victims of clergy sexual abuse for decades, said that pushes for disclosure should involve a double-barrel approach and – along with many other experts – said that legal avenues for forcing the files’ release were far from exhausted.

“The party moving for the release of the investigative files should seek court relief if the files have not been released in a timely manner pursuant to a court order. If it is shown that the files have not been released in a timely manner, the burden will be on the party who is to release the files to show the court why there is a reasonable delay in not complying with the court order,” Garabedian said.

“Epstein victims have a public voice, and they should continue to use that voice to make the public aware of the non-release of the files, to empower themselves and other victims, and make the world safer for children,” Garabedian added.

Like others, Garabedian highlighted how disclosure is key to allowing victims to move on as best they possibly can. Garabedian explained: “The release of the files is an important step in transparency, which will help victims try to gain at least a degree of healing, closure and validation.”

“What’s next has to be continued legal pressure and public accountability. If the special master route is off the table for now, then the only real tools left are court intervention, congressional oversight and sustained public scrutiny,” said Spencer Kuvin, an attorney with Goldlaw who has represented dozens of Epstein victims.

Kuvin added: “These files will not be released just because it’s the right thing to do – history shows they only come out when someone forces the issue.”

For Epstein’s survivors, Kuvin said, this impasse was “devastating”. Victims have waited years, sometimes decades, for the truth.

“Being told once again that there is ‘no path forward’ is not just frustrating – it’s retraumatizing. If Congress can’t get a special master and the DoJ won’t act voluntarily, then the focus has to shift to litigation, Foia [Freedom of Information Act] enforcement, and judicial orders compelling production,” he said. “Transparency in cases like this has never been given freely – it has always had to be dragged out through the courts.”

Lawmakers are considering legal relief. The Democratic congressman Ro Khanna, who co-sponsored the EFTA with the Republican congressman Thomas Massie, said many avenues were on the table.

“We appreciate Judge Engelmayer’s timely response and attention to our request, and we respect his decision. He said that we raised ‘legitimate concerns’ about whether DoJ is complying with the law,’” Khanna said in a statement to the Guardian. “We will continue to use every legal option to ensure the files are released and the survivors see justice.”

Massie voiced similar sentiments, telling the Guardian in a statement, “We appreciate the judge’s thoughtful consideration of our letter and we remain determined to force the DoJ to follow our law using other avenues available to us and the survivors.”

‘The DoJ is not following the law’

Legal pressures, though, remain rife with complications. Neama Rahmani, founder of West Coast Trial Lawyers and a former federal prosecutor, said Congress needed to sue for the records’ release, with the goal being a court order compelling production.

There are logistical issues for using courts to prompt these files release. “Something like this could take weeks or longer,” he said, explaining shortly thereafter: “You file the lawsuit seeking equitable relief, which is an order.

“You want that judicial order, because if the judicial order is violated, then the judge can start imposing sanctions. So you really need to involve a district judge to move this process along.”

This presents “challenging” complications, however. “Typically, if there is contempt of Congress or anything like that, or obstruction, it would be the DoJ that enforces that. They prosecute it. They file a lawsuit,” Rahmani said. “But obviously that’s not going to happen in this case, because the DoJ is the target.

“It’s bizarro world where there’s a law and the DoJ is not following the law.”

Nope. It’s a Nazi world where DOJ, Trump et al shit on the law. FFS. Trump’s a pedophile and rapist – he doesn’t give a shit about the law – he learned long ago, that rich white men need not heed the law.

Neither the justice department nor the White House immediately responded to requests for comment.

Representatives for convicted Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell, who reportedly said this week that she would plead the fifth during an upcoming House oversight committee deposition, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Some have pointed out issues with the EFTA that make enforcement difficult. This might necessitate additional lawmaking.

“For unknown reasons, Congress failed to include any type of enforcement mechanism, especially judicial review, within the Epstein legislation. Despite the mandatory provisions and aggressive nature of the disclosure requirements, this is a gaping hole that perhaps was unanticipated but is now openly evident,” Mark Zaid, a national security and transparency attorney, told the Guardian.I expect Congress did that intentionally. Their job is to protect rich kid rapists, after all, that’s fucking obvious

“Frankly, it would have been an easy fix at the time to include either a direct congressional oversight pathway for enforcement or even for the general public to litigate the claims through special [Freedom of Information Act] provisions.”

Zaid said he was sure there was a viable legal mechanism to pursue, but such was “a long way from one being viable or successful”.

“The reality is the likely best way forward is to amend the legislation and create explicit judicial oversight,” he said.

Richard Primus quote, "After Trump is gone, one of the things I am going to remember, is the cowardice of the people who went along."
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