
The two most important investigative stories this year involving Leon Black, Apollo Global Management, and Jeffrey Epstein did not come from major American newspapers.
They came from foreign-owned media organizations.
First came the explosive Financial Times investigation, which uncovered new Epstein-related files tied to Apollo leadership. That reporting became serious enough that the American Federation of Teachers filed a formal SEC complaint against Apollo citing the FT revelations and demanding an investigation into whether investors were properly informed. AFT SEC Complaint Letter
Then came the sweeping new Guardian investigation detailing additional allegations surrounding Black, Epstein victims, and legal pressure tactics.
Again, not an American newspaper.
That is not a coincidence.
The obvious question is:
Why are some of the biggest stories involving Apollo, Epstein, public pensions, and Wall Street secrecy being broken by non-U.S. media organizations while American state-capital newspapers remain largely silent?
The answer may lie in Apollo’s extraordinary financial and political influence over the very pension systems these local newspapers are supposed to investigate.
Apollo just announced it had surpassed $1 trillion in assets under management. A few years ago, Apollo publicly acknowledged that roughly 75% to 80% of its capital came from public pensions and similar institutional pools. If even a rough estimate is applied to those numbers, the scale becomes staggering.
If Apollo controls approximately $750 billion sourced from public pensions and extracts fee structures approaching 4% across private equity, private credit, real estate, infrastructure, insurance, and related vehicles, that implies roughly $30 billion annually flowing from pension beneficiaries to Apollo and affiliated Wall Street firms.
Most of these arrangements occur through secret no-bid contracts shielded from public scrutiny.
Now consider where public pension oversight traditionally occurs in America.
Not at the national media level.
Public pension oversight is usually handled by regional newspapers located in state capitals:
- The Columbus Dispatch
- Tallahassee Democrat
- Springfield IL State Journal-Register
- Austin American-Statesman
- The Indianapolis Star
- Des Moines Register
- The Topeka Capital-Journal
- Lansing State Journal
- The Jackson Clarion-Ledger
- The Providence Journal
These papers are tied to Gannett — a company whose debt structure has long been associated with Apollo-linked financing influence.
That reality creates an uncomfortable but unavoidable question:
Can newspapers aggressively investigate the pension relationships that financially support the same Wall Street ecosystem controlling or influencing their own debt structures?
Even if there is no explicit editorial interference, the structural conflict is obvious.
A newspaper chain drowning in debt and dependent on Apollo-linked financing has little institutional incentive to launch aggressive investigations into Apollo’s relationships with public pensions, state politicians, consultants, and pension trustees.
I believe this is a deliberate influence over profit strategy, like Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post, the Ellisons and CBS.
The silence becomes even more striking given the magnitude of the Epstein story.
Imagine if a major oil company, firearms manufacturer, or politically disfavored corporation faced:
- Senate investigations
- SEC complaints
- shareholder lawsuits
- survivor allegations
- Repeated Epstein revelations
- allegations involving billionaires and trafficking networks
The coverage would be relentless.
Yet Apollo continues receiving comparatively soft treatment from much of the American financial and regional press despite managing retirement assets for millions of teachers, firefighters, police officers, and state workers.
That raises a broader issue far beyond Apollo itself.
America’s local newspaper industry increasingly appears financially intertwined with the same Wall Street private equity ecosystem that dominates public pensions.
The result may not require overt censorship. Structural dependence alone can shape coverage decisions. Editors know where the financial pressure points are. Publishers understand who controls financing markets. Reporters recognize which investigations are institutionally welcome and which are not.
This may explain why some of the most important reporting involving Apollo and Epstein is now emerging from organizations outside the American corporate media structure.
The Financial Times and The Guardian are not financially embedded inside the same state-pension/local-media/private-equity nexus to the same extent as many U.S. regional newspaper chains.
That independence matters.
It also exposes a deeper problem with public pensions themselves.
Public pension systems increasingly allocate hundreds of billions into opaque private markets while the local media institutions tasked with oversight are simultaneously weakened, indebted, consolidated, or financially connected to the same Wall Street firms benefiting from the pension money.
The watchdogs become dependent on the system they are supposed to investigate.
Meanwhile, retirees bear the risks.
Teachers and state workers are told these private equity relationships are sophisticated, diversified, and professionally managed. Yet they are rarely told:
- the true fee structures
- the political influence networks
- the debt relationships
- the hidden contracts
- the valuation secrecy
- or the growing reputational risks tied to firms like Apollo
The Epstein issue is no longer merely about one billionaire.
It is becoming a case study in how concentrated financial power can influence pensions, media, politics, and public accountability simultaneously.
And the fact that the biggest stories are now being broken by foreign newspapers may be the clearest warning sign of all.
State Pensions with Apollo protected by Gannett Newspapers.
Florida State Board of Administration Apollo PE funds IV, V PC Accord V and VI
Illinois Teachers Retirement System Apollo PE funds X
Illinois Municipal Apollo Credit Wilshire
Indiana Public Retirement System (INPRS) Apollo Origination Partnership
Iowa Public Employees Retirement System, Apollo PE funds Wilshire
Kansas Public Employees Retirement System Apollo PE funds VIII,IX
Michigan RS Apollo Investment fund VIII, IX Hybrid Value Funds, Credit/ Opportunistic Credit
Mississippi PRS Apollo VIII IX Private Equity funds
Rhode Island Retirement System Apollo PE VIII, IX
Texas County & District PE fund X
Texas ERS Apollo Credit Strategies
Texas Municipal Fund VIII
Texas TRS Teachers’ Retirement Apollo PE funds











