“There aren’t gonna be any more indictments”: Nancy Mace predicts future of Epstein investigation, claims there will be no arrests
Representative Nancy Mace shared her outlook on the future of the Jeffrey Epstein investigation during an appearance on Piers Morgan Uncensored on February 24. In a clip from the episode, shared to X the same day, host Piers Morgan asked Mace directly whether she believed there would be “arrests in America” connected to the Epstein case.
Mace remarked that she had little faith in the current legal system.
“No, I don’t. I have no confidence in our justice system. I think it’s a system of injustice…There are not going to be any more indictments,” Mace said.
She went on to argue that, in her view, traditional legal consequences such as prison sentences were unlikely.
Instead, she suggested that accountability may come through public exposure and reputational damage rather than criminal prosecution. According to Mace, justice for victims could mean individuals being “removed from boards,” “publicly shamed out of civil society,” or forced to “lose their companies.”
While she acknowledged that “the dominoes are falling,” she emphasized that they were “not falling fast enough.”
Mace further explained that her push to release more documents related to the case stemmed from her belief that no additional legal action was forthcoming.
“And that’s why I’m really intent on getting all the files out there. I don’t believe there’s any more investigations…because I believe Epstein was an intel asset, maybe of one or multiple nations,” she added.
Mace also suggested that powerful interests may have shielded Epstein and suppressed damaging material.
“And that’s why our country protected him and the information and videos and audio that he had on other world leaders. But until people go to jail, people want justice. And that’s the only way we’re going to get it right now,” she added.
Nancy Mace urges the CIA to release all records related to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell

As reported by The Hill on February 17, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) formally requested that the CIA release “any and all” documents related to Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. In a letter addressed to CIA Director John L. Ratcliffe, Mace pressed the agency for transparency regarding any potential ties to the disgraced financier.
On the same day, Mace took to X to publicly announce her request.
“We’re calling on the Central Intelligence Agency to allow us to view any and all records, documents, photos, videos, passports, and other materials they may have in their possession relating to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell,” she wrote.
Mace further emphasized that Congress needed clarity about whether the CIA had any relationship with the disgraced financier and what information the agency might still be withholding.
“Congress needs to know what, if any, relationship the CIA had with Jeffrey Epstein and what information they’re sitting on,” she added.
She also stressed that the classification status of the materials should not prevent congressional review.
“Classified or not, we want to see it. The American people deserve answers about whether our intelligence agencies had connections to a child sex trafficker,” she wrote in her X post.
Attached to her X post was a screenshot of the letter she sent to Ratcliffe.
In the letter, Mace referenced a 2011 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed by the disgraced financier’s attorneys that sought records “to show his affiliation with the CIA.”
According to Department of Justice (DOJ) files, the agency responded in a July 29, 2011, letter to Epstein’s lawyer, Martin Weinberg, that it was “unable to locate any information or records” indicating an open affiliation between the disgraced financier and the CIA.
However, the DOJ documents also indicated that the CIA said it could neither “confirm nor deny” the existence of any classified relationship, citing FOIA exemptions that apply to protected intelligence information.
Mace pointed to additional DOJ materials that she argued could suggest a possible connection.
She highlighted a 2015 document in which Epstein wrote to his attorney Kathryn Ruemmler that “it looks like a CIA drop.” She also noted that the disgraced financier’s reported relationships with former CIA Director William Burns and certain foreign government representatives raised additional questions.
Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide on August 10, 2019. However, the recent release of additional files related to the disgraced financier once again thrust his name, along with those previously linked to him, back into intense public scrutiny.
Edited by Shayari Roy