To the Citizen Who Expects Better,
Few failures stain a republic more deeply than the failure to protect its children.
The crimes associated with Jeffrey Epstein were not abstractions. They involved exploitation, coercion, and the destruction of young lives. Those facts are not in dispute. What remains in dispute is whether accountability will extend fully and impartially to every participant in that wrongdoing.
Recent testimony from Attorney General Pam Bondi has raised troubling questions regarding the scope and pace of investigation. Reports that key witnesses have not been interviewed, and that individuals named in public court filings have not faced formal charges, invite scrutiny. If those reports are inaccurate, they should be clarified. If they are accurate, they demand explanation.
In matters of this magnitude, hesitation breeds distrust.
The principle at stake is not partisan. It is foundational: equal justice under law. The Constitution promises due process to the accused and protection to the innocent. It does not promise insulation to the powerful.
Wealth is not immunity. Office is not absolution. Influence is not exoneration.
If individuals committed crimes, they must be charged and prosecuted according to law. If evidence is insufficient, the public deserves transparent explanation. Silence is corrosive. Delay, without visible cause, erodes confidence.
A republic cannot tolerate a two-tiered system of justice — one for the connected and another for the ordinary citizen. The mere perception of such disparity weakens the legitimacy of every institution tasked with enforcement.
Other nations have demonstrated that status does not preclude prosecution. The United States should not lag in that standard. We have long claimed leadership in the rule of law. Leadership requires consistency.
Justice is not vengeance. It is process. But process must be visible and principled.
If innocent children were exploited — and the record shows that they were — then the full architecture of accountability must follow. Not selectively. Not strategically. Fully.
Failure to act decisively where evidence warrants action will not fade quietly into history. It will endure as a mark against our seriousness as a nation governed by law.
Equal protection is not symbolic. It is binding.
I remain,
Your Humble Servant,
Prudence C. Wilder



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