Sky Roberts Drops Bombshell on Pam Bondi: “You Protected the Predators and Harmed the Survivors” – Video Explodes to 15 Million Views in Three Hours
The online world has been turned upside down by an impassioned and unfiltered attack from Sky Roberts, brother of the late Virginia Giuffre. In a video that rocketed to 15 million views within just three hours of its release, Roberts tore into the Justice Department’s controversial decision to unseal the so-called master logs connected to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

Speaking with visible frustration and unmistakable conviction, he described the document dump as both cruel and deeply damaging. According to Roberts, federal officials went to great lengths to black out the names of alleged abusers and their enablers, while leaving the most private and painful details about the survivors fully exposed to public scrutiny. This selective approach, he charged, has reopened old wounds and subjected already-traumatized women to fresh waves of harassment and judgment.
Roberts reserved his sharpest criticism for Attorney General Pam Bondi, whom he holds directly responsible for overseeing a flawed and one-sided process. He accused Bondi of allowing a release that safeguards the powerful while abandoning the very people the justice system claims to protect. “They hid the faces of the guilty but put my sister’s story—and the stories of so many other brave women—back on display for the world to pick apart,” he declared. “This wasn’t about truth. This was about convenience for the elite.”
The timing of the controversy could hardly be more painful. Virginia Giuffre spent years fighting in courtrooms and in the public eye to hold Epstein’s network accountable, only to pass away before seeing full resolution. Now her brother stands as a fierce new voice, demanding that the same system that failed to deliver complete justice at least stop inflicting additional harm on those who survived it.
Social media has erupted in response. Millions have shared, commented, and debated the video, with survivor advocates and legal watchers echoing Roberts’ concerns about unequal transparency. Many point out that meaningful accountability requires every name—perpetrator and participant alike—to face the light, not just the victims’ most intimate histories. Others defend the release as a necessary step toward openness, even if imperfect, arguing that partial disclosure still moves the needle forward.
Yet for Sky Roberts and countless supporters, the issue is far simpler and far more urgent: no survivor should ever be forced to relive their trauma simply because officials chose to shield the guilty. The master logs, long shrouded in secrecy, were supposed to represent progress. Instead, Roberts argues, they became another example of institutional failure—one that prioritizes political comfort over human dignity.
As the view count climbs higher by the minute and calls for official comment grow louder, one message rings out clearly: the public will no longer accept half-measures or selective silence. Virginia Giuffre’s brother has drawn a line in the sand, and the world is watching to see whether Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Justice Department will finally listen—or continue down a path that leaves victims exposed while their tormentors remain hidden.
This is no longer just a legal matter. It has become a moral reckoning that refuses to be ignored.
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