About This Site
Who built this and why
“This site was built for people who don't trust the media. That's not a problem — here are the actual documents.”
Flip A MAGA was built with one guiding principle: every claim must link to a primary source. Not a tweet. Not an opinion column. Not a partisan press release. A court filing, a government document, a sworn deposition, or journalism from an outlet with established editorial standards.
The target audience is not people who already believe the allegations. It's people who are skeptical — who distrust mainstream narratives and believe the press has an agenda. That skepticism is legitimate. The response to it isn't to argue harder. It's to say: “Here's the actual court document. Here's what the judge wrote. Here's what the jury found. Read it yourself.”
The Carroll verdict is the starting point because it's not an allegation — it's a jury finding upheld by a federal appeals court. That's the kind of evidence that holds regardless of who you trust or distrust in the media.
Court Documents First
The Carroll verdict and connected rulings are the foundation. These are not media reports — they are legal records.
Government Records
The DOJ Epstein document library is official government releases at justice.gov. Anyone can access them.
Distinguish What's Proven
This site labels what's a jury verdict, what's corroborated, and what's an allegation. The distinctions matter.
Journalism of Record
Where journalism is used, it's from outlets with established editorial standards and named sources.
What this site is not: This is not a news organization. It does not break stories. It does not make accusations beyond what documents support. It does not cover pending allegations without clearly labeling them as unproven. It is a curated, sourced reference hub built to be the most credible possible presentation of what the public record contains.
Start with the strongest evidence:
The Carroll Jury Verdict