What to Know About the Upcoming Epstein Files Release
The law mandates DOJ to release nearly all unclassified Epstein-related records by Friday, including files from 2005 Florida and 2019 New York probes with limited exemptions.
- This Friday, the DOJ must release nearly all unclassified Jeffrey Epstein records in a searchable, downloadable format, as required by law.
- Bipartisan lawmakers pushed the measure through Congress after months of pressure from survivors and oversight panels, barring records withholding for political sensitivity but allowing narrow carve-outs for national defense or active investigations.
- DOJ materials are expected to include grand-jury transcripts, photos, flight logs, seized devices, and records from the Florida investigation through Epstein's 2008 plea, with redactions summarized in 15 days.
- Some officials caution that the Justice Department exemption for ongoing investigations could delay or partially withhold records, prompting Senate Democrats and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to warn of legal threats and redaction summaries, while Senator Ron Wyden doubts comprehensive disclosure.
- Given prior partial releases, House Oversight Committee shared 33,000 documents and 20,000 documents with Rep. Robert Garcia releasing 19 undated photos, while survivors and advocates say disclosures could reveal new associates.
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56 Articles
US lawmaker who spearheaded Epstein files transparency questions House session cancellation on eve of release
House canceled Friday's session when Epstein files are set to be released after months of expectations among lawmakers, Epstein victims, public - Anadolu Ajansı
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A Reckoning Nears As DOJ Runs Out Of Time On Epstein Files
One of the lawmakers behind a new law mandating the release of the government’s Jeffrey Epstein files said he is giving the Justice Department until Friday to comply, while warning there will be consequences if it does not. The Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law last month by President Donald Trump, “calls for the release, publicly, of these files,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., told NBC News. Khanna said the Justice Department has not …
When a set of photos confiscated from Jeffrey Epstein's Gmail account and laptop was made public last week, one in particular left Dani Bensky stunned.
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