Editorial Standards
This page explains how Epstein Exposed approaches reporting, sourcing, review, and corrections. The goal is simple: make public-record investigations more transparent, more attributable, and easier for readers and journalists to verify.
Core Principles
Evidence First
Our reporting is built from public records: court filings, government releases, sworn testimony, exhibits, and other documentary sources. We do not publish factual assertions as reported findings unless they are tied to source material.
Attribution Matters
Major claims should be attributable to specific documents, proceedings, or clearly identified reporting. Where a claim is based on allegations, we label it as an allegation. Where a finding is an inference, we describe it as analysis rather than established fact.
Human Editorial Responsibility
Published articles are released under a named byline and remain the responsibility of a human editor. Research systems may assist with gathering, sorting, or drafting material, but publication decisions and final wording are editorial judgments.
Corrections Over Defensiveness
When we find or are shown a material error, we correct it. Substantive corrections and clarifications should be reflected in article updates rather than silently changed where practical.
Publication Workflow
- 1Source documents are gathered from public records and cross-checked against the archive.
- 2Draft reporting is reviewed for attribution, legal risk, and whether allegations are clearly labeled.
- 3A named editor approves publication before the article is released.
- 4Post-publication issues, source disputes, and documented corrections are reviewed through the site support channel.
Corrections Policy
We welcome documented corrections. If a reader identifies a factual error, a missing source qualification, or a misleading characterization, we review that challenge against the underlying record. Material corrections should be reflected in the article's visible update history.
For supporting methodology, see Sourcing Methodology. For media context, see the Press Kit.
Style & Attribution Rules
- State what the record shows before offering analysis.
- Separate allegations, testimony, and documentary findings clearly.
- Avoid loaded or conclusory phrasing that outruns the record.
- Use precise dates, document references, and procedural context where relevant.
- Do not imply guilt from mere presence in records, contact lists, or flight manifests.
Bylines & Ownership
Investigative reporting on this site is published under the byline Eric Keller, a pseudonym used for privacy and personal safety. The use of a pseudonym does not reduce the site's editorial responsibility for what is published.