Undocumented: A Brief Survey of Documents Related to Donald Trump That Have Yet To Be Released
Troves of records, correspondence, deposition transcripts, NDAs, contracts, translator notes, intercepts, photographs & videos exist that would expose Trump for what he is. We still haven't seen them.
Some of them are sealed. Some are redacted. Others exist only on hard drives or top-secret servers or the files of various intelligence services, both foreign and domestic, both hostile and friendly. Still more were removed from a doctor’s office by two goons reminiscent of Caddyshack’s Moose and Rocco.
I speak, of course, of documents related to Donald Trump that have never been made public—important documents; smoking gun documents; documents that would expose his criminality, his sexual deviance, his mendacity, his greed, and, above all, his treason.1
At the risk of opening with the “Webster’s defines a document as…” cliché, it is instructive for our purposes to explain just what document refers to. The federal government offers this expansive definition:
The term “document” means any written, recorded, or graphic matter of any nature whatsoever, regardless of how recorded, and whether original or copy, including, but not limited to, the following: memoranda, reports, expense reports, books, manuals, instructions, financial reports, data, working papers, records, notes, letters, notices, confirmations, telegrams, receipts, appraisals, pamphlets, magazines, newspapers, prospectuses, communications, electronic mail (email), contracts, cables, notations of any type of conversation, telephone call, meeting or other inter-office or intra-office communication, bulletins, printed matter, computer printouts, teletypes, invoices, transcripts, diaries, analyses, returns, summaries, minutes, bills, accounts, estimates, projections, comparisons, messages, correspondence, press releases, circulars, financial statements, reviews, opinions, offers, studies and investigations, questionnaires and surveys, and work sheets (and all drafts, preliminary versions, alterations, modifications, revisions, changes, and amendments of any of the foregoing, as well as any attachments or appendices thereto), and graphic or oral records or representations of any kind (including without limitation, photographs, charts, graphs, microfiche, microfilm, videotape, recordings and motion pictures), and electronic, mechanical, and electric records or representations of any kind (including, without limitation, tapes, cassettes, disks, and recordings) and other written, printed, typed, or other graphic or recorded matter of any kind or nature, however produced or reproduced, and whether preserved in writing, film, tape, disk, videotape, or otherwise.
TL;DR: Anything written down, in any format, as well as any audio recording, any image, or any footage, is a document.
Trump himself recognizes the danger of certain documents seeing the light of day. That’s why he’s been at war with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) since he left office in January 2021. As the non-profit American Oversight notes in its 2025 investigative report “Trump’s Hostile Takeover of the National Archives — and Our Nation’s History,” NARA
has been a primary target of Trump’s retribution tour, having been at the center of the criminal case against Trump for his alleged mishandling of classified documents when he left office in 2021. When he returned to the White House in January 2025, he wasted little time in purging NARA’s top leadership to make room for loyal officials more likely to do his bidding—or even to turn a blind eye to future legal violations, including of the Presidential Records Act.
Enacted in 1978, the Presidential Records Act (PRA) states that all documents generated by a U.S. president while in office are the property not of the president personally, but of the American people. Therefore, everything must be preserved. All the paper, all the files. Unsurprisingly, the scofflaw who knocked down the East Wing of the White House because he thinks it belongs to him doesn’t vibe with the spirit of the PRA.
The American Oversight report continues:
Throughout his first term, Trump and his administration had routinely exhibited a disdain for record-keeping requirements, from ripping up or destroying documents to conducting official work over private email. In January 2022, after a drawn-out push for Trump to return the records, NARA retrieved 15 boxes from Mar-a-Lago, including highly classified material placed among things like dinner menus.
Believing that more materials remained unaccounted for, NARA’s inspector general referred the matter to the Justice Department.
That dust-up with NARA led to the whole Kash Patel-and-John Solomon-as-presidential-records-designees fiasco, of which more shortly. Patel proved as adept at exchanging emails with NARA’s chief counsel as he is at safeguarding his email from Iranian hackers. The author of The Plot Against the King didn’t deliver what Trump wanted—and King Donald seethed.
When Trump came back to power in 2025, he wasted little time coming after his NARA nemeses:
On Feb. 7, he fired Archivist Colleen Shogan, who said no cause or reason had been given. The deputy archivist, William Bosanko, who had worked at NARA for more than 30 years, stepped down a week later. Also out was NARA’s inspector general, adding to the growing list of independent agency watchdogs purged by Trump. The senior staff were reportedly pushed out by Jim Byron, a White House appointee and the president of the Richard Nixon Foundation. Earlier in the month, Trump had named Secretary of State Marco Rubio as the agency’s temporary head; Trump said after the shake-up that Byron would serve as a senior adviser to Rubio and would “manage the National Archives on a day-to-day basis” while the administration searched for a full-time archivist, with some media speculation pointing to Solomon.
With all the chaos and erosion of democracy in the Trump Redux, the MAGA war on NARA has gone largely unnoticed by the legacy media. But there is a reason Donald finds the archivists so irksome. He knows what those documents contain, and thus fears the damage they can do to his presidency, his legacy, and his chances of impeachment and/or criminal indictment.
Bearing all of this in mind, I made a list, hardly exhaustive, of documents pertaining to Donald Trump that we know exist but have never seen, organized in order of importance, with the most trivial—or “tri-val,” as Melania would say—first.
Speaking of the First Lady…
His (third) wife’s immigration papers
We were told, long ago, that we would hear all about Melania Trump’s immigration history. Although some of those details have been divulged, we are still waiting for the full story—although her out-of-the-blue presser last week suggests that an update may be forthcoming, whether she likes it or not.
SAT scores
The Scholastic Aptitude Test was designed by the same psychologist—Princeton University professor Carl Brigham—whose 1923 book A Study of American Intelligence argued for strict immigration controls, to better preserve the eponymous “American intelligence” by keeping out people of color, Mediterranean people, and Eastern Europeans—including Ashkenazi Jews. The study was used to justify the passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, which was, in turn, used to justify the federal government barring Jews fleeing the Nazis from coming to the United States. So the results of any standardized test Brigham created should be taken with an entire pillar of salt.
But it’s like this: Not every smart person does well on the SATs, but pretty much everyone who does well on the SATs is smart—or, to be more accurate, smart in the very limited criteria the test measures. If Donald Trump did well on his SATs, he would have his scores chiseled on the marble atop his triumphal arch. That he hasn’t released them at all indicates that he didn’t break 1000.
Academic records
In a Congressional hearing not long after Trump made his famous “stable genius” comment, Michael Cohen testified that at Donald’s behest, he wrote the President’s alma maters as well as the College Board and “threatened his high school, colleges, and the College Board not to release his grades or SAT scores.”
Cohen has been known to play fast and loose with the truth, but sources at some of the institutions corroborate his claim. As Marc Fisher wrote in the Washington Post in 2019,
In 2011, days after Donald Trump challenged President Barack Obama to “show his records” to prove that he hadn’t been a “terrible student,” the headmaster at New York Military Academy got an order from his boss: Find Trump’s academic records and help bury them.
The superintendent of the private school “came to me in a panic because he had been accosted by prominent, wealthy alumni of the school who were Mr. Trump’s friends” and who wanted to keep his records secret, recalled Evan Jones, the headmaster at the time. “He said, ‘You need to go grab that record and deliver it to me because I need to deliver it to them.’ ”
Later in the same column, Fisher notes:
Last year, he said he “heard I was first in my class” at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton business program, where he finished his undergraduate degree, but Trump’s name does not appear on the school’s dean’s list or on the list of students who received academic honors in his class of 1968.
These transcripts, assuming they haven’t been destroyed, have never been revealed to the public.
Diane Ravitch, the emeritus professor of history at NYU and a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education, put it best: “Why did Trump hide his academic records if he did as well as he claimed?”
Transcript of the “perfect call”
The notes from Trump’s “perfect” phone call with President Zelensky of Ukraine—the “do me a favor, though” convo that compelled the first impeachment—were locked away in that super secret vault we never heard about again.
The New York Times reported in October 2019:
Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, the top Ukraine expert on the National Security Council, told House impeachment investigators on Tuesday that the White House transcript of a July call between President Trump and Ukraine’s president omitted crucial words and phrases, and that his attempts to include them failed, according to three people familiar with the testimony.
The omissions, Colonel Vindman said, included Mr. Trump’s assertion that there were recordings of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. discussing Ukraine corruption, and an explicit mention by Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, of Burisma Holdings, the energy company whose board employed Mr. Biden’s son Hunter.
These omissions are not the most grievous sin, in the grand scheme of things, but are part of a long pattern of willful deception.2
Bootlegs from The Apprentice
Because of countless first-hand accounts, we know that Trump is an unrepentant bigot who makes racist comments all the time. Somewhere there are tapes, outtakes from The Apprentice, in which he drops n-bombs and other un-choice words. Noel Casler was among the first in the crew of that franchise to speak out about this. Eleven years after Trump rode down the gilded escalator, those tapes have yet to surface.3
Tax returns pre-2015 and post-2020
Founded in 1970, Tax Notes is “a portfolio of publications offered by Tax Analysts, a nonprofit tax publisher” that “provides comprehensive and impartial coverage of tax news, while its commentary contributes important voices to the discussion and understanding of tax policy.” If there is information to be had on presidential tax returns, these guys know it. Here’s what’s in the public record for our once and current president, per Tax Notes:
We have the returns filed by President Donald Trump from 2015 through 2020. These returns were released by the House Ways and Means Committee. The committee voted along party lines to release the returns on December 20, 2022….
In addition to the 2015-2020 returns, we have copies of two pages from Trump’s 2005 return that were leaked in early 2017.
On September 27, 2020, the New York Times reported it had obtained 17 years’ worth of President Trump’s individual and corporate returns. The Times received those returns from anonymous sources and has said it will not release them publicly to protect those sources. The documents are not available to other news organizations at this time.
The only reliable look at Trump’s finances—the jaw-dropping New York Times expose by Russ Beuttner and Susanne Craig that the paper of record could not have promoted less if it tried—showed gargantuan losses, year after year after year: over a billion dollars out the door over the course of a decade. Billion, with a “b”—as in broke or bankrupt or bust or belly-up.
How did Donald go from being nine digits in the red to financially secure enough to run for president? The tax documents for the years just prior to his decision to put his hat in the ring might contain some important clues—and that’s likely why he hasn’t released them.
Medical history
We’ve never seen his medical records. Not only that, but his longtime personal physician said that Trump sent two behemoths to his office and physically seized those records. This…
…doesn’t count.
We did not hear about how close Donald came to dying of covid-19 in 2020, how dangerously low his blood oxygen levels were, what exactly the doctors did to save his life, until months later, in a Times report—and then in a book by his former chief of staff (who was probably a source for the original story). Trump denied some of the reporting, so we still don’t know all the details.
Remember when he was rushed to Walter Reed Medical Center in November of 2019, and no one knew why? According to yet another book published well after the fact, he was there for a routine colonoscopy. (Why did he not just say so? Was he embarrassed that he was having a tube stuck up his ass? Was he afraid Karen Pence would Lady Macbeth her husband into taking over?) I don’t recall ever seeing official confirmation of this.
I’m still curious to hear the medical professionals who treated him after the assassination attempt explain how his ear magically regenerated.
And here in his second term, Trump’s been mysteriously disappearing at the beginning of every month, for enough days in a row that rumors begin to circulate that maybe he’s dying or dead, only to emerge like Lazarus from a deathly slumber, with yet another bad bruise on his hand. Why? What’s wrong with him?
The only thing we know for sure about Trump’s medical history is that his phantom bone spurs were bad enough to keep him out of Vietnam.
The missing binder
On January 19, 2021, in the last hours of his presidency, Donald Trump wrote a memorandum to the Attorney General and the Directors of National Intelligence and the CIA, in which he announced that the “binder of materials” received from the FBI via the DOJ a month prior was hereby “declassified to the maximum extent possible.”
But the documents he wanted most to take with him out the door—the ones in the “binder of materials”—remained beyond the grasp of his short fingers. This was no ordinary binder, you see. These were documents, specific documents, relating to “Crossfire Hurricane”—the FBI’s investigation into Trump’s Russia ties.
“Portions of the documents in the binder have remained classified and have not been released to the Congress or the public,” Trump wrote in the January 19 memo. “I requested the documents so that a declassification review could be performed and so I could determine to what extent materials in the binder should be released in unclassified form.” And then: “I determined that the materials in that binder should be declassified to the maximum extent possible.”
In a bombshell 2023 CNN report, titled “The Mystery of the Missing Binder: How a Collection of Raw Russian Intelligence Disappeared Under Trump,” the reporting team of Jeremy Herb, Katie Bo Lillis, Natasha Bertrand, Evan Perez, and Zachary Cohen explained that the ten-inch-thick binder
contained raw intelligence the US and its NATO allies collected on Russians and Russian agents, including sources and methods that informed the US government’s assessment that Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to help Trump win the 2016 election, sources tell CNN.
The intelligence was so sensitive that lawmakers and congressional aides with top secret security clearances were able to review the material only at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, where their work scrutinizing it was itself kept in a locked safe.
On December 30, 2020—three weeks before the end of Trump’s presidency—the binder was delivered by the DOJ to the White House, where it lived in a safe in the office of Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. His assistant, Cassidy Hutchinson, aware of its significance, put it there for safekeeping.
After Trump gave the eleventh-hour go-ahead to declassify the redacted documents, copies of the “binder of materials” were hurriedly made. The then-president’s plan, according to CNN, was to hand out copies to various members of Congress and the press who were sympathetic to Trump—including the conspiracy-peddling “journalist” John Solomon, who says he was invited by Meadows to the White House the night before Biden’s inauguration and had made plans to scan and publish the materials. It had all the hallmarks of a Wikileaks-style operation: a document dump disguised as journalism.
But Trump’s plans were thwarted. The copies of the binder documents were retrieved almost immediately, when White House attorneys freaked out about the possibility of the materials being out in the wild before a more fine-tooth-comb security review. There were grave national security concerns at the Bureau, as CNN discovered:
“Any further declassification would reveal sensitive intelligence collection techniques, damage foreign partner relations, jeopardize United States Intelligence Community equities, potentially violate court orders limiting the dissemination of FISA information … (and) endanger confidential human sources,” a top FBI official wrote to White House officials, according to a source who read portions of the letter to CNN.
I wrote about this story in September 2024:
The binder, I’m told, has since been found and was presumably returned to the top secret storage vault where it belongs. What information did it contain? And why was Donald so dead-set on John Solomon releasing it? Was it to cherry-pick what was to be disclosed and what was not, to better control the narrative? If so, to what end?
The “pee-pee” tape
Technically, a document!
After so many months of Epstein speculation—which included one alleged victim, an Iraq War veteran, claiming, against all medical logic, that he put a condom around a tent spike and kicked it into Trump’s rectum—a video of Donald and Melania watching Slavic sex workers tinkle on a mattress at the Ritz-Carlton Moscow seems quaint. But the tape’s materialization would give even more weight to the general conclusions, all of them true, drawn by Christopher Steele in his “dossier.”
FBI confidential informant files
The details of his criminal history are shrouded in secrecy. In 2015-16, the New York Times declined to revisit reporting about Trump’s long history with the mob that could be found in its own archives.
The FBI has files on Trump. He was friends for decades—we might even say he cultivated a friendship—with James Kallstrom, who rose through the Bureau’s ranks to head its New York office. Whether Trump was a “pocket informant,” as Craig Unger suggests in American Kompromat, or a full-on C.I., as has been argued on these pages, he was certainly feeding the Bureau information. How much? For what purpose? And what did he get in exchange? We can only surmise.
“And,” as Stephanie Koff wondered on these pages six full years ago, when she was still only known as Lincoln’s Bible, “if you have knowledge of Trump’s CI files, isn’t corruption of this magnitude a ‘break the glass’ moment? What good is all the secrecy around donald’s history as a CI doing for the DOJ now? What is the secrecy actually protecting, if maintaining it means the rule of law itself is being destroyed?”4
Fast-forward to April 2026. The CI files are still cloaked in secrecy, safe and sound; the rule of law is bleeding out in a gutter.
Secret Service notes from the assassination attempt
Trump is not Wolverine, or the cheerleader from Heroes. Ears don’t grow back like summer lawn.
What the fuck happened in Butler? And why haven’t we heard anything more about it?
Translator notes from Helsinki
Remember Helsinki? When Trump and Putin stole away together like teenagers at a middle school dance? Remember the photo taken shortly after—Donald seeming to submissively bow before his Kremlin whoremaster?
After that world-stage humiliation, even the intelligence guys were compelled to speak out. “Donald Trump’s press conference performance in Helsinki rises to & exceeds the threshold of ‘high crimes & misdemeanors,’” tweeted the former CIA director John O. Brennan. “It was nothing short of treasonous. Not only were Trump’s comments imbecilic, he is wholly in the pocket of Putin.”
By now, Trump has been simping for Putin for so long, and in so many obvious ways, that only a fool would continue to believe he still has America’s best interests at heart. It was obvious to me in 2018, when I wrote Dirty Rubles. It was even more obvious last year, when the “Krasnov” story broke:
HRC told us what time it was at the presidential debate, back in October 2016:
And now?
This headline from the Washington Post, after Viktor Orbán got his ass handed to him in the Hungarian election this weekend, was typical: “Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, ally of Trump and Putin, concedes election defeat.” Ally of two hateful, mobbed-up strongmen! Trump stands with the world’s autocrats—the other members of his ridiculous Board of Peace.
Which brings us back to Finland. What did Trump and Putin discuss in private at Helsinki? We still don’t know.
Intelligence Community files
Although none of us normies have seen, or can decisively confirm, that various U.S. intelligence agencies have files on Donald Trump…they do. They must.
Koff laid this all out in that same interview:
If you’re laundering money for the Russian mafia—for [Semion] Mogilevich—then you’re the property of the Kremlin. Full stop. I don’t care when it happened, or if Mogilevich is still as powerful as he once was. Once the Kremlin owns you, they own you for life. Even if our guys are running you, too. Even if our guys ran you first. You belong to the Kremlin. No matter how small your balls are, Putin has them in his pocket. And there’s no way that you don’t know he owns you. No fucking way. If Helsinki wasn’t enough to demonstrate this truth, then just stop reading.
What’s more? There’s no way our intelligence agencies don’t know this about donald. There is no universe in which they don’t have intercepts, evidence collected by human intelligence, shared intel from our allies, and probably even donald’s own recordings and paper…
Still shaking your head? Let’s pose it as inquiry, to break through that dissonance:
Do you really think our intelligence agencies are so inept that they wouldn’t be monitoring a known money launderer for Mogilevich and other Kremlin-connected criminals?
Do you actually think that our intelligence agencies are such bungling fools, that they would not use a man who was already a Top Echelon Confidential Informant and swimming in social circles with the KGB and Mossad spy Robert Maxwell? Think they wouldn’t use him? That he wouldn’t be top of the list? Really?
….Do you think, for one fucking second, that our allies—who are not constrained against signal collections of U.S. citizens—were not collecting intelligence on the world’s most dangerous criminals known to be in business with donald? Do you think they didn’t pick up donald’s name, or even his voice, on any of donald’s “deals?”
Can a famous reality TV personality and “businessman” with a global brand launder money for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and NOT be tracked by FiveEye intelligence services? What about our ally, Israel? No collection there? No? They are so terrible at spying that they didn’t know about donald laundering for Mogilevich and the Iranians (among others)?
Do you believe that before donald’s Presidency, none of our allies shared this intelligence with us?
Get real. I could ask ten more questions just like this. And for those former CIA/NSA folks with Twitter accounts, who like to jump on my timeline and pooh-pooh me: you can’t have it both ways. You can’t rightfully promote the skill and scope of your agencies and play dumb about donald. You might not have been on a desk that was aware of his fat fucking file, but you can’t stare at all that’s in the public domain and pretend he wouldn’t have been a tool in your agency’s box. You can’t play smart and dumb. Choose.
So: yes, these files exist.
In The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11, Lawrence Wright’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 2006 book, he decries the lack of communication and intelligence sharing between the CIA and the FBI—particularly I-49, the Bureau’s Al-Qaeda counterterrorism investigation team. The pre-9/11 wall between the agencies, Wright says, was typical of “a bizarre trend in the US government to hide information from the people who most needed it.”
He continues:
A secret court in Washington, created by the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, became the arbiter of what information could be shared—“thrown over the Wall,” in the parliament of the court. Bureaucratic confusion and inertia allowed the policy to gradually choke off the flow of essential information to the I-49 counterterrorism squad.
The CIA eagerly institutionalized the barrier that separated it from the bureau. The formula used by the CIA supervisor…to justify not telling the [FBI] agents the identities of the [highly dangerous al-Qaeda] men in the photographs was that it would compromise “sensitive sources and methods.”
There was so much stonewalling, it became a running joke on the team:
The agents on the I-49 were so used to being denied access to intelligence that they bought a CD of a Pink Floyd song, “Another Brick in the Wall.” Whenever they received the same formulation about “sensitive sources and methods,” they would hold up the phone to the CD player and push Play.
After 9/11, the agencies became better at exchanging information. But the Intelligence Community held to its “sensitive sources and methods” modus operandi. Just as Merrick Garland protected “norms” above all else, so the various intel agencies safeguarded their secrets. And this choice may still prove fatal to the republic.
As Koff said in April 2020—a month into quarantine, at the end of a week during which over 17,000 Americans died of covid:
If those who can expose donald fail to do so, the risks involved to our lives, our republic, and their own institutions are catastrophic. There is no surviving this secret.
Maybe before the pandemic, we could have gotten past this Presidency, learned all the horrible truths, and been angry about what our intelligence community cost us by keeping us in the dark. But not now. Not after mass death.
Because it will come out. That’s just the physics of secrecy. It’s part of the arc.
The world will know, without any doubt, who and what donald was before he became President. And they’ll be raging with that question: “Why he wasn’t stopped?”
Americans will forever blame the institutions who chose to protect themselves and their precious secrecy over both the rule of law and the lives of tens of thousands of innocent civilians.
Six years later, and the only difference is that, when it comes to the number of innocent Americans who died needlessly from Trump’s negligence and sadism, it’s hundreds of thousands, not just tens.
Volume II of Jack Smith’s report
American Oversight is doing yeoman’s work to secure the release of this document—sealed by order of the treasonous Judge Aileen Cannon. So I will give them the floor. This is from March 2026 (boldface mine):
According to information made public by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, the Department of Justice has provided Congress with a memo containing previously undisclosed details from Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into President Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents after leaving office. The documents indicate that Trump allegedly took records tied to his business interests and others that were apparently so confidential they were reportedly shared with only six individuals in the entire U.S. government. In response to the news, American Oversight issued the following statement:
“Every new detail that comes to light about the report Judge Cannon has gone to great lengths to keep hidden underscores the same basic truth: the public is being denied access to critical information about one of the most serious national security scandals in American history,” said Chioma Chukwu, Executive Director of American Oversight. “While fragments of the factual record have seen the light of day, the full report remains under seal because Judge Cannon has prioritized the president’s personal interests over transparency. The public has a right to see Special Counsel Smith’s findings in full. Blocking the report’s release only serves to protect those in power and prevent accountability.”
In addition to these damning findings, Smith spent more than eight hours testifying behind closed doors before the House Judiciary Committee last December. There, he revealed that his investigation produced “proof beyond a reasonable doubt” that President Trump unlawfully attempted to overturn the 2020 election and had uncovered “powerful evidence” that the president willfully retained highly classified documents after leaving office.
We have been at the forefront of efforts to secure the public release of Volume II of Special Counsel Smith’s final report. Our litigation is currently before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit where oral arguments are tentatively set for the week of June 22.
Trump sold out the country, jeopardized our national security, stole classified material, and attempted a coup—but we don’t get to see all the “powerful” supporting evidence, the “proof beyond a reasonable doubt,” because of deliberate obstruction by a corrupt, Colombia-born judge who, if the roles were reversed—if she’d been protecting Biden instead of Trump—Donald would have already dispatched to an ICE detention center.
Smith must be beside himself, knowing what he knows. But we have an entire fourth estate that would be all too happy to run some of the highlights, if he chose to blow the whistle. Is he really abiding by Cannon’s bullshit order and staying quiet in the hopes that he’ll get to try Trump someday? That will happen around the same time Donald becomes Pope.
And, last but not least. . .
The Epstein Files
We don’t know which Epstein documents Donald Trump is so afraid of. If his name is really cited over a million times in the Files, as Jamie Raskin claimed, there are quite a few to choose from.
Will it be…
the list that Pam Bondi said was on her desk?
an NDA Trump agreed to with one or more of the survivors?
records of the FBI’s investigation of Jane Doe 4?
dirt on Melania?
bank records?
proof of Trump’s complicity in the Epstein-Maxwell child sex trafficking network?
photos of Trump in flagrante delicto with children Epstein kept in his personal safe and allegedly showed to Michael Wolff?
footage of CSAM involving POTUS?
footage of Trump violently raping and killing?
I’ve already speculated on what the Files might reveal—what could be worse than the stuff we already know:
But Trump-Epstein speculation is, frankly, a waste of mental energy. And it’s toxic. It’s bad for the soul.
We need to know, and to know definitively, what Donald Trump did that’s so heinous, so unspeakable, that he went to war with Iran to throw us off the scent. Because there’s only one way for Trump to trump (excuse the pun) starting another Gulf War, and that’s to nuke Tehran.
Nine days ago, the president menacingly suggested, on social media, that “a whole civilization”—that is, not just Iran and its 94 million people, but all of Persian history and culture—“will die tonight, never to be brought back again.” That was not perceived as an idle threat; this maniac, after all, has the nuclear launch codes.
We need to know before things get even worse.
The withholding of so many critical documents imperils our national security. We need to know what’s in these documents, and we need to know now.
Collectively, the documents listed above tell the story of a nation—of our nation. To fully understand recent history, and to prevent global catastrophe, we must hear the complete and unabridged account.
If Trump is a Kremlin asset, as I’ve been saying for years; if he is a mob money launderer, a sex trafficker, a serial rapist of children; if he is a traitor who sold out his homeland for (speaking of Jesus) 30 pieces of silver—then the American people have not just the right, but the urgent need, to know for certain.
In this mindfuck era of disinformation and lies, we need to know—we deserve—the truth.
The fate of the world may well depend on it.
Photo credit: Božo Gunjajević.
To all the social media legal know-it-alls who like to remind me that we have to be at war for it to be treason…um, we’re at war.
In the interest of full journalistic disclosure, I interviewed Vindman on stage at his book launch event at the Ukrainian Institute of America
Eat shit, Mark Burnett.
Koff spells Donald Trump with lowercase letters on purpose. I’m keeping them.












It’s TUESDAY🎉Phew; this represents a LOT of work! It also represents an important read for future US history students. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Released or not, we assume the worst. But human imagination cannot begin to grasp the cosmic venality of this creature. The arc of justice is taking a long tortured detour.