Epstein survivors DEMAND investigation of Pam Bondi's DOJ - "Transparency shouldn't re-traumatize us." The people Jeffrey Epstein harmed are done being ignored - and now they're demanding accountability from the very Justice Department that claims to stand for the rule of law. In a blistering letter this week, Epstein survivors formally asked the Department of Justice's Inspector General to investigate Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the long-awaited Epstein case files, accusing her DOJ of botching their release and putting survivors at risk in the process. The survivors didn't mince words. They warned that the way the files have been released so far shows "serious failures" in redaction, oversight, and basic survivor protection - failures they say have caused renewed harm and shattered trust in institutions charged with safeguarding sensitive information. According to the letter, survivors have noticed a "troubling pattern of selective redactions," raising fears that the DOJ may be choosing what to hide and what to expose - and doing so without regard for the people whose lives were already torn apart by Epstein's abuse. Their request is straightforward: independent oversight. The survivors are asking the Inspector General to review how the files were released, determine whether the law was followed, and supervise future disclosures to ensure compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act - without sacrificing survivor safety in the name of speed. "Transparency should not come at the cost of retraumatizing survivors," the letter stresses. "Accountability requires that lessons be learned and corrective actions taken." This isn't the first time red flags have been raised. Survivors have previously joined Democratic lawmakers in urging investigators to look into whether some Epstein files were tampered with - concerns that only grow louder as Bondi's DOJ pushes out releases critics say are sloppy, inconsistent, and potentially dangerous. The message from survivors is clear: justice isn't just about dumping documents. It's about doing it right. At a moment when public trust in institutions is already fraying - and when Trump and his allies are once again trying to bury the Epstein story with whatever distractions they can muster - the DOJ's handling of these files matters more than ever. Survivors aren't asking for secrecy. They're asking for competence, care, and the most basic respect. If Pam Bondi's Justice Department can't manage transparency without harming the very people it claims to serve, then oversight isn't optional - it's urgent. Please like and share if you support the Epstein survivors!