Journalist Julie K. Brown on Whatâs Still Missing in the Epstein Case
Journalist Julie K. Brown on Whatâs Still Missing in the Epstein Case
Tess Bonn, News and Politics Editor Tue, March 24, 2026 at 8:33 PM UTC
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Journalist Julie K. Brown on Whatâs Still Missing in the Epstein Case
The frenzy around the Epstein files hasnât dissipated, but it has noticeably cooled. After an initial wave of headlines tied to the release of millions of documents â and the fallout that followed â focus is being pulled elsewhere, from the escalating war with Iran to the fight over Department of Homeland Security funding, which is now contributing to mounting disruptions at airports.
But Julie K. Brown â the Miami Herald reporter whose investigation helped reopen the case â isnât letting it fade. In new reporting with her colleague Claire Healy, which she discussed with Katie Couric, she reveals that just days after Jeffrey Epsteinâs 2019 death, an inmate â later identified as Steven Lopez â was told to dispose of bags of shredded material. Itâs unclear who gave the order, but he said another inmate was brought in to help.
Corrections Officer Robert Kearins, whom Lopez first alerted, flagged it to the FBI, warning the materials were being discarded before they could be properly reviewed. What happened next is even murkier: Thereâs no indication in the Epstein files that the FBI, federal prosecutors, or the Office of the Inspector General took any further action.
In her conversation with Katie on Substack Live, Brown pointed to that lack of follow-through as a key concern. She said the contents â and whether anything meaningful was destroyed â remain unknown. âItâs hard to know for sure exactly what they shredded,â she said. She also questioned how investigators handled Lopez, saying the interview relied on yes-or-no answers instead of deeper probing. âNot really the way you question someone when you want to find out what happened,â she told Katie, adding that Lopez appeared intimidated.
One report suggests a prison lieutenant â whose name was redacted â may have been present during the questioning, and the transcript shows Lopez was worried about possible retaliation for speaking up. Kearins was also interviewed but said he didnât know what was being destroyed â only that it was gone before authorities could review it.
The questions don't end there. Brown also pointed to other missing records, noting, âWe canât find any of the inmate counts before August 10th,â the day Epstein was found dead. Without them, she said, itâs harder to piece together even the most basic timeline.
This is just one piece of a larger pattern Brown has been tracking for years â delays, missing documentation, and critical gaps that have made it difficult to fully understand what happened inside the jail in the days surrounding Epsteinâs death. As she puts it, âitâs like a big puzzle â and you only have a third of the pieces.â
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She says the lack of access to key records âsays a lot about this whole cover-up,â adding that âthe public needs to keep pushingâ elected officials for answers. âThis was a sex crime involving children â it shouldnât be a political debate,â she says. "Everyone should want to get to the truth here because a lot of people were harmed."
Epstein Files Latest with Julie K. Brown by Katie Couric Media
A recording from Katie Couric's live video
Read on Substack
All of it points to a case that, years later, still feels unresolved. And while public attention may have drifted, the central questions havenât â what was lost, what was overlooked, and whether the full story will ever truly come into focus.
Watch the full interview above for more on the key unanswered questions about what happened inside the jail.
The post Journalist Julie K. Brown on Whatâs Still Missing in the Epstein Case appeared first on Katie Couric Media.
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ