The Department of Justice is pulling another fast one on the American people, this time using the name of dead rock legend Janis Joplin to obscure the real bombshells hiding in Jeffrey Epstein's client files.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) called out the DOJ's obvious stall tactics after the agency dumped a six-page letter Saturday naming over 300 "high-profile figures" connected to the Epstein case - including singers who died decades before Epstein became a household name.
Joplin, the iconic "Me and Bobby McGee" singer, died of a heroin overdose in 1970. Epstein wasn't even born until 1953. Yet somehow, the DOJ thought it was crucial to include her name alongside actual suspects in what should be the most transparent investigation in modern American history.
Deep State Protection Racket in Full Swing
This isn't incompetence, Patriots - it's deliberate obfuscation. The same DOJ that spent years weaponizing itself against President Trump is now working overtime to protect the real criminals who flew on Epstein's "Lolita Express" and partied on his island of horrors.
"The DOJ is muddying the waters," Khanna said, and for once, a Democrat is speaking truth about the administrative state's games.
"Why are they throwing random names into this list? What are they trying to hide?" one congressional source told reporters.
The answer is obvious: they're protecting the powerful elites who actually committed crimes. By flooding the zone with irrelevant names like Joplin, they're making it harder for investigators and journalists to focus on the real predators who need to be brought to justice.
President Trump has promised full transparency on the Epstein files, but the Deep State bureaucrats are fighting him every step of the way. They know that once Americans see the real client list, it will expose the rot at the heart of our political and entertainment establishment.
How many more dead celebrities will the DOJ hide behind before they finally release the truth? And what are they so desperate to keep hidden from We the People?
