After Cayden McBride finishes class in Rome, Georgia, the 19-year-old goes home, opens his laptop, and starts searching.
For the past few months, he has been spending hours at a time combing through the Jeffrey Epstein files on the US Department of Justice (DOJ) website and following others online who are doing the same.
Flight logs. Transcripts. Images. Videos. The material released by the DOJ has given new insight into the crimes of the late convicted sex offender and into his high-profile connections.
McBride believes the Epstein files still matter, even if the headlines have moved on to the Iran war recently.
As a Christian, I don't believe anybody should endure what these women have been through, he says. There is so much bad stuff in these files.
McBride was a self-described Trump guy and very anti-establishment. He said he would always defend the US president in the belief that Donald Trump's Make America Great Again (Maga) movement stood for exposing corruption.
But the DOJ's delay in releasing all the files, and the perceived lack of accountability afterwards, has left him and many others disheartened with the movement, the president and especially with Pam Bondi, Trump's former attorney general.
Bondi was removed from her post just last week, to be replaced, in the interim, by her deputy Todd Blanche.
Trump has lauded Bondi for doing a tremendous job and Blanche denied reports that his predecessor's handling of the Epstein files had been a factor in her departure.
But McBride hailed the changing of the guard, expressing hope that there could now be renewed focus on the Epstein issue.
His wish was granted this week, from an unlikely quarter. The Epstein story came crashing back into the news when First Lady Melania Trump unexpectedly denied associating with him and called for a congressional hearing for his victims.
It is unclear how much that will galvanise interest, but Bondi's removal has done little to quiet the discontent amongst Trump's supporters like McBride. He thinks she needed to go because she wasn't prosecuting the people she needed to.
He thinks there might be some high-status arrests, but after that, other things like Iran, immigration raids and the midterms will, in his words, sweep the Epstein story under the rug.
Many Epstein conspiracy theorists have long counted themselves amongst Trump's most ardent supporters.
They believe that Epstein's death in prison was not a suicide, as the FBI concluded, and have insinuated that the government was involved with some sort of cover-up, protecting powerful people whom they believe participated in his crimes.
It's a belief echoed by many of Trump's closest and former allies. As long ago as 2021, Vance tweeted: What possible interest would the US government have in keeping Epstein's clients secret? During his 2024 campaign, Trump himself stated he would go a long way towards releasing the Epstein files, but later appeared to backtrack on this stance.
Trump dropped his initial opposition after pushback from Epstein's victims and members of his own party, signing a law compelling the DOJ to release thousands of files. DOJ officials now state they have released all they can, bar certain exempt items, yet many conspiracy theorists remain skeptical.
The political implications could be profound, particularly among younger voters who had supported Trump in 2024, with some now questioning their allegiance as voter disenchantment grows.
McBride is resolute: It won't stop me voting, but I am definitely not voting for anybody implicated by the Epstein files, he says. Or anybody that is sponsored by President Trump.


















