The Bombs Don't Delete the Documents
- Patrick Duggan
- Feb 28
- 3 min read
# The Bombs Don't Delete the Documents
**398,525 Epstein files survive Operation Epic Fury.**
At 11:54 AM Central on February 28, 2026, while the United States and Israel launched "major combat operations" against Iran — 500 targets across Tehran, Isfahan, Qom, and Kermanshah — the internet noticed something.
Not the 201 reported dead across 24 Iranian provinces. Not the retaliatory missiles hitting US bases in Bahrain, or fragments landing in Dubai. Not even Iran's internet dropping to 4% of normal traffic in what's being called the largest cyberattack in history.
What the internet noticed was *timing*.
The Pattern
Within minutes of the first explosions, a pattern emerged organically across social media:
> *"He can drop as many bombs in Iran as he likes, he isn't going to blow up the Epstein files that way."*
> *"War with Iran is a distraction, the Epstein files are the reason."*
> *"The Israel-directed war against Iran has definitely distracted me from Ghislaine Maxwell whose father was known..."*
People aren't stupid. They see bombs falling on the same day that pressure mounts on the most explosive document cache in American legal history. They draw their own conclusions.
We don't need to draw conclusions. We just need to make the documents searchable.
What Survives Every Bomb
**398,525 documents** from the Jeffrey Epstein investigation sit in a searchable index at [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com). They include:
- **12 Department of Justice datasets** — flight logs, deposition transcripts, communications, financial records
- **50 court cases** from archive.org — including quashed 2005 Florida case files, Grand Jury 05-02, and Maxwell trial exhibits
- **FOIA releases** from 4 federal agencies — FBI, CBP, Bureau of Prisons, Florida state records
- **2 million+ ICIJ offshore entities** cross-referenced through Panama and Pandora Papers
- **40 audio recordings** from the Palm Beach Police Department investigation
All of it government-released. All of it legal. All of it the government's own words.
No bomb in Tehran changes a single page.
The Government's Own Narrative
Here's what makes this different from WikiLeaks, from hacked emails, from leaked intelligence: every document in this index was **released by the government itself**.
The DOJ chose what to include. They chose what to redact. They chose the format. Even their carefully filtered narrative — the version they *wanted* the public to see — is damning enough to implicate Cabinet members, resign Lords, and rewrite the relationship map of American power.
The corollary nobody asks: if this is what they *released*, what did they keep?
11 Million Documents, $500 a Month
The full DugganUSA intelligence platform indexes **11,064,949 documents** across **42.8 GB** of searchable data. The Epstein files are one of 37 indexes that include:
- **943,711 threat intelligence indicators** feeding 275+ STIX consumers in 46 countries
- **2,063,619 federal court decisions**
- **3,339,267 ICIJ relationship edges** mapping offshore financial networks
- **350 named threat actors** tracked in real-time
Total monthly infrastructure cost: roughly $500.
The entire apparatus that indexes Jeffrey Epstein's legal exposure costs less than one Tomahawk missile's guidance fin.
What Happens Next
Iran will retaliate in cyberspace. The historical pattern after kinetic strikes is a 700% increase in Iranian cyber operations within 72 hours. Water utilities, energy infrastructure, and defense contractors are primary targets.
We track that too. That's what the 943,711 IOCs are for.
But the Epstein files don't need defending from Iranian hackers. They need defending from the impulse to look away — the very human tendency to let the explosion on screen replace the document on the page.
The bombs are loud. The documents are quiet. But the documents are forever.
*398,525 DOJ documents. 50 court cases. 40 audio recordings. Searchable at [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com).*
*The government's own narrative, made searchable, indicts the government.*
**DugganUSA LLC** — protect. publish. amplify.
*Built on government data. Powered by Claude. Costs less than a missile fin.*
*Her name was Renee Nicole Good.*
*His name was Alex Jeffery Pretti.*




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