by Sean Adl-Tabatabai, The Peoples Voice:
The FBI claim that a group of mysterious ‘hackers’ deleted millions of Epstein files that named and shamed elite pedophiles connected to the child sex trafficker.
Sworn testimony buried in the Trump administration’s recent batch of Epstein documents reveals that an FBI computer system hack resulted in the destruction of over 100 terabytes of data.
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Headlineusa.com reports: The record in question is a draft of a September 2024 sworn declaration from FBI agent Aaron Spivack, who was under an internal bureau investigation for being responsible for the February 2023 computer intrusion. The record has been reported on by a French publication and was posted on Reddit, but has otherwise remained unpublicized until now.
🚨NEW(ish)🚨
An explosive FBI record in the Epstein Files shows that the bureau’s NYC office was hacked in 2023, and that hackers gained access to Epstein records.
Worse still, some 100TB of data was lost as a result.STORY BELOW🧵 pic.twitter.com/CsH1FuhV1b
— Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) February 27, 2026
According to Agent Spivack’s declaration, the 2023 FBI computer hack stems from the bureau enabling remote internet access to the C-20 computer lab. The FBI’s C-20 squad is a group in the New York office that investigates child sex crimes by.
“I believe enabling remote access to the C-20 computer lab was a good initiative, but it was not executed properly,” Agent Spivak said in his declaration.
As a result, the FBI’s C-20 computer lab was hacked on Feb. 12, 2023, when the Chiefs played the Eagles in the Super Bowl. Agent Spivack said he discovered the intrusion the next day.
“Around 3:30pm or so we located the log files and began combing through, which is when we noticed strange IP activity that took place yesterday from two IP addresses. The activity included combing through certain files pertaining to the Epstein investigation,” he said.
“I reached out to one of the case agents to see if they were in the office yesterday, thinking that maybe they inadvertently changed a setting on the NAS or if they noticed anything strange about them.”
Additionally, Agent Spivack said that 500 terabytes of data went missing as a result of the intrusion. He said he was able to recover about 400 terabytes.
“I was told to Google how to recover the data,” he remarked in his declaration. “No one else tried to help us.”
Spivak said his team wasn’t able to identify the computer that hacked them—“but it had to have accessed our network either by being plugged into the network, or possibly by telnetting in virtually,” he added.
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