Skill Level: Intermediate — Strategic Advocacy
What This Tool Is
A step-by-step method for everyday resisters to protect survivors, push for full public disclosure, and keep elite accountability at the center of national conversation — without exposing survivors to harassment, retraumatization, or legal risk.
Why This Matters
Survivors of trafficking and sexual abuse have repeatedly described systems of silence, intimidation, and power protection around wealthy abusers. Demanding the release of unclassified Epstein files is not just about the past —
it’s about preventing future abuse and ensuring that no one is above the law.
What You’ll Need
- A phone or computer
- Safe scripts and messaging
- Trusted reporting from established outlets
- Ground News or similar bias-awareness tools
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Center survivors — always
Use survivor-approved language:
- “Allegations described in sworn declarations”
- “Court filings stated…”
- “The accused denied wrongdoing”
Never present unverified claims as fact.
2. Pressure the DOJ for full release
Make your demands specific:
- All unclassified Epstein-related documents
- No political-protection redactions
- A firm public timeline
Sample message:
“I am a voter calling to respectfully demand full transparency in all Jeffrey Epstein files — survivors deserve truth and accountability.”
3. Use public records smartly
Only reference documents you have read or verified reporting you can cite.
Focus on:
- Case filings
- Depositions
- Court-ordered releases
- Congressional actions
4. Monitor disinformation attempts
Bad actors may try to:
- Discredit survivors
- Blame victims
- Recast allegations as partisan narratives
Counter with:
“These are survivor statements and court documents — accountability is nonpartisan.”
5. Support survivor-led organizations
Examples of what to amplify:
- Legal advocacy updates
- Public statements from survivor attorneys
- Verified calls for action
Only share what survivors choose to make public.
6. Document intimidation attempts
If you or others receive threats or harassment for speaking up:
- Screenshot everything
- Log dates/times
- Report to platform + authorities
Silencing survivors is part of the abuse system — resisting silence protects everyone.
7. Build momentum on key news days
When files drop or hearings occur:
- Post summaries using verified articles
- Share hotline/resource links
- Remind followers that survivors spoke years ago — now the public must listen
Example Action for Today
Choose one story about Epstein network accountability.
Share:
“Here’s why this headline matters for justice and protection of survivors.”
Invite two people to learn and act with you.
Quick Safety Reminders
- Do not name alleged perpetrators beyond what is confirmed in court filings or major news organizations.
- Do not identify survivors without their consent.
- Assume digital predators are watching public conversations — advocate smartly, not recklessly.
How This Keeps Us Safe
By using truth from trusted sources, centering survivor autonomy, and demanding structural accountability, we avoid legal or ethical traps while still clawing at unjust power. This strategy makes sure the abusers feel the heat, not the advocates
