Your Kids Are Reading the Epstein Files
Students are digging through federal records, viral games are reshaping the narrative, and accountability still hasn’t come.
I was sitting at my desk Friday morning, half-listening, when a 16-year-old girl’s voice cut through the noise. She was talking about the Epstein files.
Not rumors. Not TikTok gossip. The actual DOJ release.
She and her friends had spent last weekend tracking down documents. They saw TikTok accounts holding printed emails up to the camera while harmless audio played underneath, so the algorithm wouldn’t suppress it. The number associated with the files was printed on the page.
The kids knew to go twenty pages deep. They knew what they were looking for.
The mother in me was gutted by this. These kids should be thinking about prom dresses and exams, not combing through correspondence between Jeffrey Epstein and powerful men.
But the genie is out of the bottle, and no algorithm is putting it back.
TikTok has become an unlikely town square for this story. In April 2024, Congress passed the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, forcing ByteDance to divest TikTok’s U.S. operations over national security concerns. The Supreme Court upheld it in January 2025. According to ABC News, in early 2026, TikTok’s U.S. operations were transferred to a new American-controlled structure with Oracle and private equity investors involved.
And yet the platform lawmakers fought to regulate is now where Americans—many of them teenagers—are locating documents that their own Department of Justice released.
Melinda French Gates, the ex-wife of billionaire and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, spoke about the document release in a recent NPR interview, describing the revelations in the DOJ files as bringing back “very painful times” in her marriage. She said remaining questions were for others to answer, not her. She expressed hope that the women who have spoken publicly would receive justice.
Bill Gates has denied wrongdoing, calling allegations “absurd and completely false.” His name appears in portions of the broader Epstein record, as have many other high-profile individuals, some as contacts, some in correspondence, some without any accusation of criminal conduct.
What landed so hard for me on Friday morning was that the teenagers I overheard were not discussing politics. They were talking about girls who were their age. Younger, some of them. Girls who said for years what had happened to them. Yet, they were doubted.
But the DOJ release is not a rumor. It is a government archive of primary material (though heavily redacted) that is accessible to anyone who goes poking around in the files.
The teenagers I overheard went home and read federal documents on their own. They did not wait for cable news to interpret it for them. They followed breadcrumbs and found the source.
But while some kids are looking for primary sources, others are being systematically desensitized to child sexual assault.
Last week, I wrote a Substack article in which I followed the thread from school photography to the Epstein files to AI.
Parents across the country were incensed to learn that Lifetouch, the leader in school photography, had previously been owned by Leon Black, who is named in the Epstein files. They took to Facebook to denounce the company and demand that schools no longer use them. They bombarded school districts with phone calls and emails saying their child could no longer have their photograph taken.
In my article, I point out that Lifetouch is just a cog in the wheel. There are bigger things to be concerned about.
Today, I was introduced to one by a group of 15-year-olds who were hovering around a school-issued Chromebook playing a game called Five Nights at Epstein’s. Sportskeeda reported that the game was released in January 2026, and by mid-February, it was viral.
The game puts the player in the role of a victim trapped on Epstein’s island, surviving five nights while hiding from Epstein and others named in the files. The game recreates video and audio from the DOJ files and mixes them into a terrifying, mind-bending game.
According to Know Your Meme, a TikTok video of a student playing it at school drew 2.8 million views in nine days.
I saw it myself. I heard the screams of a little girl as the kid showed me how the game is played. There was no age gate. No warning. It said Copyright 2026. I took a picture because I didn’t trust myself to describe it accurately.
The older kids who saw the younger ones playing the game said exactly the right thing: you’re normalizing this. They are brainwashing you to think this is normal.
They were right.
I immediately alerted the administration to the game, and it has been removed from our platform, but others will pop up. They always do.
This is what fills the vacuum when accountability doesn’t come. A horror game built around a child’s screams, accessible on the same Chromebook your school district handed your kid for homework. Neatly tucked under the heading Math Tutor.
We cannot kid ourselves that our children do not know about these files or what they contain. They likely know more than any of us do about what is in them.
They are watching now. Watching to see whether institutions respond transparently. Watching to see whether evidence matters. Watching to see whether power shields or answers.
We tell young people that truth matters. That documentation matters. That no one is above the law.
If we believe that, then transparency should not frighten us.
It is time to release everything that can legally be released. Fully, with appropriate protections for victims. Let citizens read it without filters, speculation, or algorithmic mediation.
Let the record stand on its own.
And then let the law do what the law is supposed to do.
—Carol



wow. I had no idea this would be on the minds of our teenagers. How sad that there is a game about this:(
It feels like we’re setting our youth up to be moral $uic!de b0mber$. Adults won’t take the wounds of the fight for accountability, so children bear them instead. They immerse in the heart stopping horror because grownups won’t. They scream until they’re hoarse about it because the DOJ won’t. “Moral injury” and disillusionment should be reserved for grownups. We can shield them from the psychological self-harm of immersing in trauma, but someone has to go in. Someone has to.
I haven’t scoured the files. Sometimes I read something from it and my heart races. I spend the day in a stupor. That’s a real human child that was raped, mocked, made a target of sadism. It isn’t stuff you read about and go on about your day.
I’ll say it again. The kids are smart. The kids are informed. They are clear eyed. They are morally attuned. More so than my generation. A hell of a lot more than the boomers ever were or will be (a generalization, no offense intended).
In a very short time, we have made tremendous progress in how we raise children. We have seen how beautiful childhood can be. We have explored how healthy and strong children can grow, how far they can climb when cherished. Innocence is mythologized… but it’s still something powerful, and I fear we have allowed its destruction by being the only country on earth to not take this seriously.
Now, they need us to step up. They’re too smart and too morally aware to let this go unaddressed.