The Washington Free Beacon Newspaper Named Jeffrey Epstein Its ‘Man of the Year’
The beacon is more than far right, it’s far off😜

January 5, 2026

Man of the Year, or Moral Vacuum of the Year? Pedophile of the Year?

A Modest Proposal from the Washington Free Beacon Awards Committee (Apparently). In a bold act of editorial minimalism — where moral judgment is replaced by raw notoriety — the Washington Free Beacon has reportedly named Jeffrey Epstein its Man of the Year. The decision, sources say, was reached after editors bravely asked the question plaguing modern journalism: What if attention itself is the only virtue that matters?

According to the paper’s implied logic, Epstein was not selected despite his crimes, scandals, and the enduring trauma associated with his name — but precisely because of them. In an era when algorithms reward outrage, clicks trump conscience, and “engagement” has replaced ethical clarity, Epstein stands as the perfect symbol of our time: omnipresent, infamous, and incapable of being ignored.

The Free Beacon’s editorial board appears to have taken inspiration from the old newsroom adage, “If it bleeds, it leads,” updating it for the digital age to “If it disgusts, it trends.” Why celebrate scientists, humanitarians, or whistleblowers when one can instead honor a man whose legacy includes international sex trafficking, shadowy wealth networks, and a death so suspicious it has launched a thousand podcasts?

To be fair, Epstein’s résumé is impressive — if one measures achievement by the breadth of institutional failure. Few individuals can claim to have exposed simultaneous breakdowns in law enforcement, elite accountability, political courage, and media self-restraint. In that sense, Epstein didn’t merely participate in history; he stress-tested it.

Critics have complained that naming Epstein Man of the Year risks normalizing monstrosity. But defenders counter that normalization is precisely the point. After all, we live in a moment when scandal is recycled as content, predators are rebranded as provocations, and moral shock has the shelf life of a news cycle. If anything, the award reflects a brutally honest editorial philosophy: relevance is righteousness.

One imagines the internal debate was spirited but brief.

“Isn’t he a convicted sex offender?”
“Yes, but have you seen the traffic numbers?”

The award also resolves a lingering journalistic dilemma: how to appear fearless without doing the harder work of accountability. By honoring Epstein posthumously, the paper takes no personal risk — he cannot sue, respond, or contradict. It is courage without consequence, provocation without responsibility.

In previous eras, “Man of the Year” was meant to recognize individuals who shaped the world — for better or worse — while still inviting readers to wrestle with power, leadership, and moral complexity. This version dispenses with such nuance. There is no “for better or worse” here. There is only attention, stripped of judgment and served hot.

Perhaps the Free Beacon deserves credit for radical transparency. By selecting Epstein, the paper may be unintentionally confessing something deeper — not about him, but about us. About a media ecosystem that confuses notoriety for significance and shock for insight. About a culture that claims to loathe predators while endlessly monetizing their names.

If so, then maybe the headline is accurate after all. Not because Jeffrey Epstein represents greatness, influence, or accomplishment — but because he represents the bleakest truth of the moment we inhabit:


Beacon of What?

The Washington Free Beacon is an American political journalism website and online newspaper that produces news, investigative reporting, and commentary from a conservative perspective. It is based in Washington, D.C. and publishes content on politics, policy, government affairs, national security, media analysis, and cultural issues.

Launch Date: February 7, 2012. (Free Beacon) Founders: Michael Goldfarb, Aaron Harrison, and Matthew Continetti. The publication was started as a project of the Center for American Freedom, a conservative advocacy organization. Its stated mission is to “uncover stories the powers that be hope will never see the light of day,” focusing on original investigative journalism rather than solely commentary. 

The outlet seeks to produce in-depth reporting on public policy, government actions, international affairs, and issues often under-covered by other news organizations.

Format: Online news site (no traditional print edition). Ownership: Privately owned and for-profit; financially supported by donors, including hedge fund manager Paul Singer, a major Republican donor. (Wikipedia) Headquarters: Washington, D.C. (Free Beacon) Editor in Chief: Eliana Johnson (took the position in 2019). (Wikipedia)

The publication also has managing editors and investigative reporters on its masthead. (Free Beacon)
Editorial Style and Focus

The Washington Free Beacon produces news reports, investigations, and opinion pieces from a clearly conservative editorial stance. (Wikipedia) It aims to influence mainstream media coverage by highlighting stories it considers under-reported and to challenge narratives favored by more liberal outlets. (Free Beacon)

Coverage topics include political opposition research, government transparency, academia, culture war issues, and national security. (Wikipedia)
Notable Reporting and Influence

The Free Beacon has broken stories leading to high profile responses and consequences, such as coverage that contributed to the resignation of Harvard University’s president over plagiarism allegations. 

It has also published investigative pieces on topics ranging from university admissions policies to political figures’ past conduct. (Wikipedia)In the 2016 U.S. presidential election cycle, the Free Beacon hired opposition research firm Fusion GPS to research multiple candidates; the work later became linked to the research compiled into the Steele dossier, though the Free Beacon ended its contract before the dossier was produced. (Wikipedia)
Reception and Criticism

Perception: The outlet is widely viewed as a conservative media platform with a right-leaning bias in story selection and framing. (Media Bias/Fact Check) Media analysis groups such as Media Bias/Fact Check and Ad Fontes rate it as having right-leaning bias and mixed reliability due to ideological slant and occasional misleading headlines. (Media Bias/Fact Check)

Some media commentators praise its original reporting and investigative contributions; others critique it for partisan framing or advocacy journalism. (Washingtonian)
Platform and Reach

he Free Beacon operates a website, offers newsletters, and maintains a digital media presence including video content on social platforms. (YouTube) It distributes news through web publication and mobile apps to reach a national audience. (App Store)
Biographical Overview of Ghislaine Maxwell (Background and Conviction)

Full Name: Ghislaine Noelle Marion Maxwell
Date of Birth: December 25, 1961
Birthplace: Maisons-Laffitte, France (Encyclopedia Britannica)

Family and Early Life: Daughter of British publishing magnate Robert Maxwell; she grew up in a wealthy, influential family. (Wikipedia) Educated in England and involved in high-society social networks before relocating to the United States after her father’s death. (Wikipedia)

Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein: Became a close associate and romantic partner of financier Jeffrey Epstein, later assisting his operations. (Encyclopedia Britannica)

Criminal Charges and Conviction: Prosecuted in federal court in New York; convicted on five sex-trafficking related counts in December 2021, including: Sex trafficking of a minor

Conspiracy and transportation of minors with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity (Wikipedia) The jury acquitted her on one charge (enticing a minor). (Wikipedia)

In June 2022, she was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison. (Wikipedia) Role in Crimes (as found by the court): The evidence presented at trial showed Maxwell groomed and recruited underage girls for Epstein’s sexual abuse and participated directly in aspects of the exploitation. (Wikipedia)
Appeals of Conviction
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Photo by Tim Mossholder on Unsplash

Appellate History: After her conviction and sentencing, Maxwell appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. That court affirmed her conviction and sentence in September 2024, rejecting her claims of legal error. (Justia)

Supreme Court Action: In 2025, Maxwell’s legal team petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to consider her case, focusing on arguments that: A 2007 non-prosecution agreement (NPA) negotiated for Epstein should have prevented federal prosecution of her as a “potential co-conspirator.” Her conviction involved legal and constitutional defects. (Supreme Court)

The Supreme Court declined to hear her appeal in October 2025. It refused to grant certiorari (i.e., refused to review the Second Circuit’s decision), effectively ending this particular path of appeal. (LiveNOW)
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Photo by Emiliano Bar on Unsplash
B. Recent Legal Filings Seeking Freedom

Habeas Corpus Petition (December 2025):
Maxwell has filed additional petitions in federal court — separate from the Supreme Court appeal — including: A habeas corpus petition and related filings asserting her conviction should be vacated or her sentence set aside. These filings argue: “Substantial new evidence” has emerged that could affect the fairness of her trial;

Constitutional violations and alleged withholding of exculpatory evidence warrant relief. (The Independent) In some of these filings, Maxwell represented herself and was reprimanded by a federal judge for including unredacted victim names, which led the judge to seal portions of her submissions. (AP News)

These filings are ongoing district-court matters; as of the latest reporting, they have not resulted in release or a change in her conviction.
C. Other Legal Developments

Separately, broad public release of documents and grand jury testimony from the Epstein case is occurring under the Epstein Files Transparency Act; these releases have added context to Maxwell’s role but also generated controversy and criticism from both victims and lawmakers. (AP News)

Summary of Appeal/Release Status

Legal PathStatusSecond Circuit AppealConviction affirmed (2024) (Justia)Supreme Court AppealDenied (October 2025) (LiveNOW)Habeas/Collateral AttackFiled; ongoing; no release granted (The Independent)Pardon/Executive Action SpeculationDiscussed publicly but no official action

the WORD Editor Gregg W. Morris

 

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