You already know the justice system treats rich and poor differently. This film shows you exactly how the machinery works — and it's worse than you think.
Over 40 minutes, LJ breaks down the specific strategies wealthy defendants use to avoid accountability: elite legal teams that litigate every detail for years, private intelligence firms hired to investigate and silence accusers, PR operations that rebrand criminals as philanthropists, and civil settlements paired with NDAs that turn justice into a transaction — pay enough and the charges disappear, the victims are silenced, and no one ever admits guilt.
The Jeffrey Epstein case runs through the film as the ultimate example. In 2008, despite federal evidence of a vast sex trafficking operation, Epstein secured a non-prosecution agreement that shut down the FBI investigation, granted immunity to unnamed co-conspirators, and resulted in just 13 months of a sentence he was allowed to serve largely outside of jail. The film also covers the corporate version of the same playbook — HSBC laundering money for cartels, Boeing's safety failures, Volkswagen cheating emissions tests — where billion-dollar fines replace criminal prosecution and executives walk free while shareholders foot the bill.
The takeaway isn't just that the system is unfair. It's that a parallel legal system exists for the powerful, and it was built on purpose.
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