A stunned world froze as Sarah Baxter, Director of the Marie Colvin Centre for International Reporting, dissected the Epstein files chaos on Times Radio December 23, 2025: “There’s all sorts of stuff coming out, but it’s such a drip feed.”

Baxter, speaking to host Kate McCann, lamented the fragmented disclosures under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (completed December 19, no bombshells). “There’s all sorts of stuff coming out—photos of Trump grinning with Epstein, Clinton beaming with Maxwell, Gates cozy with Andrew, Bannon selfies—but it’s such a drip feed,” she said, voice edged with frustration. “Redactions, vanished files overnight, no client list or tapes. Survivors like Virginia Giuffre fought for truth—her memoir Nobody’s Girl named Andrew 88 times, toppled him October 30. This piecemeal release? It’s retraumatizing, not justice.”
The studio hushed as Baxter warned: “Drip feed protects the powerful—elites breathe easy while victims wait.” She praised Giuffre’s courage amid her April 25 suicide at 41: “Her truth outlives redactions.”
The interview, viewed millions, trended #DripFeedFiles with 4.2 million posts (82% demanding unredacted truth). Baxter’s dissection—raw, unflinching—amplified survivor pain: files delivered in drips, justice deferred. As Christmas loomed, her words ensured Giuffre’s legacy pierced the chaos: drip feed no match for unyielding thunder.
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