The Mission

Make America Rape Free

What Is M.A.R.F.?

M.A.R.F. stands for Make America Rape Free. It is a statement. A demand. A line in the sand.

We exist because the people who were supposed to protect us didn't. Because the institutions that were supposed to hold predators accountable looked the other way. Because silence became complicity, and complicity became policy.

This isn't merch. It's a position. Every hat that leaves our shop was ordered by someone who decided that staying quiet was no longer an option.

The Evidence

Everything on this page is sourced from public reporting by major news organizations and official government records. We encourage you to read the sources yourself. The links are at the bottom of this page.

The Epstein Files Transparency Act

On November 19, 2025, President Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act into law.1 The bill passed the U.S. House of Representatives 427 to 1 and cleared the Senate unanimously.2 It required the Attorney General to declassify and publicly release all files related to the prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein within 30 days — and to provide Congress with an unredacted list of all government officials and politically exposed persons named in those files.

3.5 Million Pages Released

In compliance with the Act, the Department of Justice published nearly 3.5 million pages of documents, more than 2,000 videos, and over 180,000 images to a searchable public database.3 Flight logs. Witness depositions. Victim statements. Communications. The names of politicians, billionaires, and public figures — printed in black and white in federal records.

The full archive is available on the DOJ Epstein Library.4

What's Missing

On February 24, 2026, NPR published an investigation revealing that the Department of Justice had withheld and removed dozens of pages from the public database — specifically pages that mention President Trump in connection with sexual abuse accusations.5

A separate CNN review found that over 90 of approximately 325 FBI witness interview records — more than a quarter of the total — do not appear on the DOJ website. Among the missing records are three interviews related to a woman who told the FBI that Jeffrey Epstein had repeatedly abused her starting when she was approximately 13 years old, and who also accused Trump of sexually assaulting her.6

The FBI determined the woman's allegations were significant enough to follow up with her on four separate dates: July 24, 2019, August 7, 2019, August 20, 2019, and October 16, 2019. Only the summary from the first interview was included in the public release. The other three are missing.65

The DOJ stated that unreleased documents are "privileged, duplicates, or relate to an ongoing federal investigation." House Democrats on the Oversight Committee have opened an investigation into the Department's handling of these records.7

The Carroll Verdict

In May 2023, a federal jury found Donald Trump liable for the sexual abuse of writer E. Jean Carroll and awarded her $5 million in damages. The jury deliberated for less than three hours.8

Federal Judge Lewis A. Kaplan later clarified that the jury's finding constituted rape "as the word is commonly understood," even though it did not meet New York's narrow statutory definition at the time.9 In December 2024, a federal appeals court upheld the verdict in full.8

The Pattern

Sealed testimony. Missing FBI records. A civil rape verdict upheld on appeal. A DOJ that releases 3.5 million pages but withholds the ones that mention the President. A 13-year-old girl who told federal agents what happened to her — four times — and the public has never been allowed to read three of those interviews.

These are not conspiracy theories. These are court records, federal filings, and investigative journalism from NPR, CNN, NBC, PBS, The Washington Post, Fortune, and The Hill. Every claim on this page is linked to its source below.

Why This Exists

The files are out. The flight logs are public. The names are known. And yet — nothing. No criminal indictments for the enablers. No trial for the participants. No accountability for the people who looked the other way while children were trafficked to private islands, Manhattan townhouses, and New Mexico ranches.

The system didn't fail. It performed exactly as designed — to protect the powerful at the expense of the powerless.

M.A.R.F. is for everyone who refuses to accept that. Everyone who believes that no one — regardless of wealth, power, or political affiliation — is above the law when it comes to the exploitation of children. Knowing isn't enough. Knowing without acting is just spectatorship. The survivors who have waited years for someone to believe them deserve more than spectators.

What We Believe

  • That every survivor deserves to be heard
  • That accountability has no party line
  • That wearing your values is an act of courage
  • That silence is a choice — and we choose to speak
  • That the truth doesn't care about your politics
  • That sealed testimony should see daylight
  • That sexual violence against children is not a partisan issue

More Than A Hat

Every M.A.R.F. product is a conversation starter. It's a signal to others that you see what's happening and you won't stay quiet about it. It's not left. It's not right. It's human.

When you wear M.A.R.F., you're joining a growing movement of people who believe that protecting children and holding predators accountable shouldn't be controversial. Nobody accidentally buys this hat. Every one that exists was asked for by someone who chose to say something.

People will stare. People will ask. Some will agree. Some won't. A few will pretend they didn't see it. But they did. And they'll think about it later. That's how movements work — not in one loud moment, but in a thousand quiet ones that build until the silence becomes impossible to maintain.

Join The Movement

Follow us. Share the message. Start the conversation. The more people who speak up, the harder it becomes to look away.

  • Wear it. Let people ask questions.
  • Share it. Post it. Tag us.
  • Talk about it. The conversation is the point.
  • Read the files. The DOJ archive is public and searchable.

Sources

Every factual claim on this page is backed by public reporting and official government records.

  1. Epstein Files Transparency Act — Full Text — Congress.gov
  2. Epstein Files Transparency Act — Overview — Wikipedia
  3. Department of Justice Publishes 3.5 Million Responsive Pages — DOJ.gov
  4. Epstein Library — Public Document Archive — DOJ.gov
  5. DOJ Removed, Withheld Epstein Files Related to Accusations About Trump — NPR
  6. Dozens of FBI Records Apparently Missing From Epstein Files — CNN
  7. House Democrats to Investigate DOJ's Handling of Missing Epstein Files — NPR
  8. A Jury Finds Trump Liable for Battery and Defamation in E. Jean Carroll Trial — NPR
  9. Judge Clarifies: Yes, Trump Was Found to Have Raped E. Jean Carroll — The Washington Post
  10. DOJ Hasn't Released Some Epstein Files Related to Trump Allegation — NBC News
  11. Investigation Reveals DOJ Withheld Epstein Files Mentioning Trump — PBS NewsHour
  12. The Big New Controversy Over the Epstein Files, Explained — The Hill
  13. Epstein Files Are Missing Trump Mentions That Have Appeared in the Press — Fortune
  14. Epstein Files — Comprehensive Overview — Wikipedia

Contact

Questions, press inquiries, or just want to connect? Reach out at info@makeamericarapefree.com