Epstein Files: Thousands of Redacted Documents Released
The Justice Department released heavily redacted files with extensive photos of Bill Clinton and minimal mentions of Donald Trump, citing protection of over 1,200 Epstein victims.
- On Friday, the U.S. Department of Justice published hundreds of thousands of Epstein-related pages to meet a congressional deadline after a law passed last month, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said more releases will follow.
- After an overwhelmingly bipartisan vote, Congress forced the release last month following months of resistance by President Donald Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi.
- Clinton appears repeatedly in the released images, featuring former President Bill Clinton with Ghislaine Maxwell, while many files were heavily redacted and references to President Donald Trump were sparse.
- Lawmakers criticised the partial release and vowed legal action if the DOJ is noncompliant, with Rep. Ro Khanna warning of impeachment, while White House spokespersons portrayed release as transparency.
- The disclosure law allows redactions to protect victims and investigations, and DOJ identified more than 1,200 victims or relatives requiring redaction, while Rep. Ro Khanna said key documents like a draft indictment are missing and DOJ acknowledged withholding some files pending review on Friday.
40 Articles
40 Articles
The U.S. Department of Justice has published numerous new Epstein documents. On several photos you can see former U.S. President Clinton. And what about Trump?
The U.S. Department of Justice publishes explosive Epstein documents. Disclosures show connections to Clinton and Trump.
Jake Tapper Swipes Through 100 Blacked-Out Pages From DOJ's Epstein Files Drop Live On-Air: 'The Transparency We're Getting'
Jake Tapper swiped through 100 blacked-out pages from Friday’s Epstein Files drop while live on-air, emphasizing the censorship of the documents. On Friday, the DOJ dropped what they said was “several hundred thousand” pages of the Epstein Files. As journalists began poring over them, they quickly learned that many of the released files were heavily redacted. And, during his Friday broadcast on CNN, Tapper asked if this was the “transparency” th…
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