The Paedemic project is an independent research and archival initiative dedicated to compiling, indexing, and making accessible primary source materials related to allegations of sexual misconduct, pedophilia, blackmail, and systemic exploitation in politics, media, and global power structures. Launched around March 2024, the project aims to expose the historical and ongoing use of these tactics as tools for control, manipulation, and maintaining elite agendas since World War II. By centralizing declassified documents, court filings, and investigative reports—particularly from high-profile cases like those involving Jeffrey Epstein and Sean "Diddy" Combs—Paedemic seeks to foster public awareness, encourage critical examination of institutional failures, and highlight the broader societal impacts of normalized exploitation.
The project's tagline, "Silence Drowns the Screams," underscores its mission to amplify suppressed voices and challenge the mechanisms that perpetuate these issues. It operates as an open educational resource, emphasizing transparency through searchable databases, transcriptions, and curated analyses. All content is drawn from publicly released primary sources, with a focus on empowering users to conduct their own queries and draw informed conclusions.
Paedemic is not affiliated with any government, corporation, or advocacy group; it is driven by a commitment to truth-seeking amid systemic silence.
The project is led by a small team of dedicated researchers and developers:
For inquiries, collaborations, or contributions, contact the team at info@paedemic.com.
Paedemic's ecosystem is structured around a central index with specialized subdomains for case-specific archives. Each subdomain features searchable databases, file viewers, and tools for querying documents. Below is an overview of the key parts:
Primary Sources Query Tool
Secondary Sources Query Tool
Text and File Viewer
Paedemic remains an evolving project, with plans to expand archives to additional cases and improve search functionalities. For the latest updates, visit the main site or follow discussions on sinvis.org. This resource is provided for informational purposes; users are encouraged to verify sources independently.