BREAKING🚨 While the Epstein files were being quietly redacted inside the Situation Room, survivors’ names were exposed and powerful men stayed hidden. The man in those meetings is now Trump’s pick for attorney general. The survivors are saying absolutely not. Nineteen women who survived Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse have come forward together to oppose Todd Blanche’s nomination as Trump’s permanent attorney general. Their letter responds to a report that Blanche joined closed door White House meetings in the Situation Room about how to handle the political fallout from the Epstein files, at the exact moment survivors and members of Congress were demanding full transparency. Those meetings were not about opening new investigations. They were about managing a public relations crisis. According to the survivors, senior officials focused on “the release of Epstein files as a reputational concern” rather than using that mandate to chase leads, follow names and finally expose the full network of abusers and enablers. The women are specific about Blanche’s role. As acting attorney general, he oversaw the release process after Congress forced the administration to make Epstein related records public. Survivors say those releases were riddled with problems. Their private information was exposed in some documents. At the same time, names of alleged co conspirators and powerful associates stayed hidden behind thick black redactions or were withheld entirely. Blanche has repeatedly told the press and senators that he has engaged with survivors and taken their concerns seriously. The women flatly deny it. In their statement, they say he has not met with any of them, that their requests for meetings went nowhere and that he has “consistently minimized legitimate concerns” about the files. They call his nomination “a clear case of failing upward.” This is not just about paperwork. Survivors argue that the Justice Department found time to manage Ghislaine Maxwell’s interview, stage manage transcripts and announce the Epstein review is “over” while leaving victims to beg for basic answers. They point out that many have already reported crimes, multiple times, and are now being told to come forward again because the system did not act. Their demand to the Senate is blunt. They want an attorney general who will use the full power of the office to seek justice, protect future victims and finally bring the whole Epstein network into the light, instead of treating survivor privacy and public transparency as political problems to be managed.