Takeaways from release of Epstein files
The Justice Department released about 4,000 Epstein files, mostly photos, under a law mandating transparency; officials expect to finish releasing documents by year-end.
- On Friday, the U.S. Department of Justice published thousands of files related to Jeffrey Epstein, a late sex offender with connections to powerful people.
- Although President Donald Trump tried to keep the records sealed, a law he signed last month set the deadline for the Justice Department to release most of its Epstein files.
- Among the released documents are around 4,000 files, mostly photographs taken by the FBI during searches of Epstein's homes, some of which show former President Bill Clinton.
29 Articles
29 Articles
The U.S. government has released more files of the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. After initial review ex-President Bill Clinton often appears, President Trump rarely. Critics criticise the intransparent selection methodology.
Takeaways from the US Justice Department's initial release of Epstein files, mandated by Congress
The Department of Justice has published thousands of its files related to Jeffrey Epstein. The Friday document dump was long anticipated for its potential to reveal new details about the late sex offender and his connections to powerful people.
5 initial takeaways from DOJ's release of Epstein documents
The Justice Department (DOJ) on Friday released a tranche of thousands of documents related to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, that included public court records, photographs, flight logs and other materials. The release came in response to a law that garnered near unanimous support, with only one House member voting against it that gave [...]
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