Join BigTentUSA on Thursday, February 19 at 7pm ET for a timely virtual conversation with Camaron Stevenson and Nina Burleigh of COURIER Newsroom as they break down the latest twists in the Epstein case following the release of three million newly unsealed documents. Drawing on COURIER’s investigative reporting, Stevenson and Burleigh will examine newly revealed details involving figures such as Howard Lutnick, Brad Karp, and other key names and institutions emerging from the latest tranche.
They’ll unpack what these records tell us about elite networks, legal maneuvering, and accountability—what we’ve learned so far, what remains obscured, and why this moment matters both domestically and globally. From media and political power to the failures of our institutions, this conversation will connect the dots—and outline what Americans should be watching next.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS:
Nina Burleigh is a a journalist, best-selling author, documentary producer, and publisher of a Substack on politics called American Freakshow. A contributing editor at The New Republic and frequent contributor to the New York Times and New York Magazine, her journalism has been published widely including in translation in the Norwegian and Italian press. She’s the author of eight books on an array of topics including archaeological forgery, scientists in 18th Century Egypt, James Smithson, Amanda Knox in Italy, and the Trump women, which were reviewed, excerpted or covered in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Nation, New York Magazine, BBC, ABC, MSNBC, and other media outlets. She was born and educated in the Midwest, has been based in Washington, D.C., New York, Norway, Paris and Italy, traveled and reported extensively in the Middle East. An adjunct professor at NYU’s Arthur J. Carter Journalism Institute, Google Scholar says her work has been cited in hundreds of scholarly articles.
Camaron Stevenson is the Founding Editor and Chief Political Correspondent for The Copper Courier, and has worked as a journalist in Phoenix for over a decade. He also teaches multimedia journalism at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.

