The release of some 3.5 million pages of U.S. Justice Department files, including more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 photographs, revealed the extent of the Jeffrey Epstein case. The summoning of Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton for questioning before Congress, which has not been seen in the US for decades, is not a search for the truth but shows how the scandal has become a tool of party politics, according to Ma Ning's commentary. The criminal case has turned into a mirror of the American political and judicial system and a symbol of government failure, judicial injustice and moral decay.
Partisan disputes have turned into „ugly theatre“, where political calculation prevails over facts. The outcome of the hearing between former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was predetermined by partisan loyalty, critics say. This struggle to control the narrative has completely replaced a genuine search for accountability and has demonstrated selective transparency where information is used against political opponents.
The judicial system faces practical difficulties in dealing with large-scale, clandestine criminal networks involving powerful individuals. Documents show that despite „disturbing photographs“ and emails, it has not always been possible to prosecute. A system that is supposed to be independent has become political theatre, with the interests of victims and the public taking a back seat to partisan objectives.
The scandal also reveals the moral decline of the privileged elite. The published emails, photographs and flight records show a world lacking basic ethics. Foreign royalty and the political elite prove that the problem is not confined to the US, but is global - the powerful are disconnected from the public. Epstein's case has thus turned from a sex crime case into an „autopsy“ of the rules of power.

The legacy of the case is not only how many people will be punished, but also whether it will prompt deep self-reflection by the system. A global network of elites from New York to London continues to operate while only some parts of the case have been exposed. The Epstein scandal has become a „political autopsy,“ revealing a nation paralyzed by mutual destruction, where the law is subject to power and social morality is eroded by an ungrounded elite.
The tragedy remains that in the party struggle, justice and the voices of the victims became the first casualties, buried under an avalanche of political ambition and institutional failure.