Justice Over Vengeance: Why We Should Support Pam Bondi's Epstein Decision

I want Jeffrey Epstein's clients in prison too.

Every single one of us does. When Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel, and Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced yesterday that the Epstein case was being closed due to insufficient evidence, my heart sank just like yours.

But then I remembered what we're fighting for.

We all share the same desire for justice. We've waited years to see the monsters who preyed on children face the consequences of their evil. The frustration is real. The anger is justified.

And that's exactly why we need to talk about what justice looks like.

When Bondi's team made their announcement, they weren't protecting elites or covering up crimes. They were doing something that takes incredible courage in today's political climate: They were following the evidence wherever it led, even when it led to a dead end.

Was evidence in this case tampered with, tainted or destroyed? Almost certainly. Does this case once again show that our system is full of corruption?  Absolutely. 

Here's the hard truth about justice that nobody wants to hear: Sometimes the bad guys get away. Sometimes there isn't enough evidence. 

And I wouldn't want our justice system any other way.

Because the same constitutional protections that occasionally let guilty people walk free are the ones that help keep innocent Americans from being railroaded.

As Benjamin Franklin wrote, "it is better 100 guilty Persons should escape than that one innocent Person should suffer."

But here's what should give us hope: While we've been focused on yesterday's crimes, today's victims are crying out for rescue. Right now, 300,000 children who crossed our border under Biden's watch are missing. Gone. Vanished into trafficking networks that are operating at this very moment.

This is where our righteous anger can actually save lives.

Scripture reminds us: "Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord" (Romans 12:19). Our calling isn't to satisfy our desire for revenge—it's to build a justice system that protects the innocent and punishes the guilty according to the law.

The pain of not seeing Epstein's clients convicted is real—but imagine the pain of 300,000 missing children who need us to focus on their rescue instead of our frustration.

Every FBI agent chasing cold leads on a case without prosecutable evidence is an agent not working to find these trafficked children. Every prosecutor building cases on insufficient evidence is a prosecutor not dismantling the trafficking networks operating right under our noses.

Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, and Dan Bongino didn't take these jobs to give us emotional satisfaction. They took them to restore the rule of law and actually save lives. And that means making the strategic decision to focus resources where they can build winning cases.

Here's how we should measure their success:

  • How many children are rescued from trafficking?
  • How many fentanyl deaths are prevented?
  • How much does crime drop in our communities?
  • How effectively is the justice system depoliticized?

Without solid evidence, Epstein cases become political theater. With proper focus, we can dismantle actual trafficking rings and save real children.

The truth is, many of Epstein's clients may indeed walk free. That's the price of requiring actual evidence in a constitutional republic. But those 300,000 missing children don't have to suffer while we lick our wounds.

Maybe—just maybe—while rescuing today's victims, we'll uncover tomorrow's evidence against yesterday's criminals. Justice has a way of finding its path when we focus on protecting the innocent rather than punishing our enemies.

So here's what I'm asking my fellow patriots to do:

Channel that righteous anger into saving today's victims. The 300,000 missing border children need rescue operations, not political theater about old cases.

Let Bondi, Patel, and Bongino to make the tough choices. Insist on transparency and accountability, but allow them to focus resources where they can actually win.

Demand action on current trafficking. Make the rescue of these missing children the priority it deserves to be.

Support real justice over quick satisfaction. Our constitutional system isn't perfect, but it's what separates us from banana republics where evidence doesn't matter.

I know it's frustrating. I know you wanted to see those perp walks. I know the headlines about insufficient evidence feel like defeat.

But 300,000 children are counting on us to choose their rescue over our revenge.

Some battles we lose to fight the war. Some cases we close to save the victims who still have a chance.

This isn't about giving up on justice—it's about choosing which justice matters most right now.

Support our team. Save our children. Trust the process.

Because real patriots know that protecting the innocent matters more than punishing the guilty.

The clock is ticking for those 300,000 missing children. Let's make sure our justice system is working for them, not against them.

Jeffrey Epstein by Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department is licensed under Wikimedia
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