The US Justice Department has also started publishing a mass of previously undisclosed files concerning convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, after years of struggle to get government documents regarding the case publicised.
It is released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a congressional law signed by US President Donald Trump in November. It mandated that unclassified reports in the department’s custody be disclosed by December 19, 2025.
On Friday, the Justice Department announced that it will issue many hundreds of thousands of pages of documentation on the deadline, but Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said that the complete collection will not be published at once, but new batches will be published throughout the next few weeks, according to Fox News.
According to Blanche, the department required more time to secure the identifies of the victims, and make sure identities of the victims and make sure the names and other identifying information are properly redacted.
The documents released recently consist of a very extensive array of investigative content produced during close to twenty years of federal investigations of the activities and network of Epstein. According to CBS News, these records can include photographs, internal police communications, evidence lists and other records about several issues surrounding the Epstein inquiry.
Besides the Justice Department release that occurred on Friday, thousands of pages of materials have already been brought to light by lawmakers and committees via subpoena and voluntary disclosure. In September, tens of thousands of pages of records, including court records
Snd flight logs, as well as videos of the jail cell occupied by Epstein before his death, were published by the House Oversight Committee. The revelations that had been earlier also contained both the previously accessible information and a new dimension to the contacts of Epstein with high-profile individuals. Political leaders whose names can be found on the records have not been charged at all.
The Epstein Files Transparency Act also mandates the government to produce a list of all politically exposed individuals and government officials mentioned in the records, as well as reasons why it is redacted and withheld, within 15 days of the release of the documents.
In spite of the milestone release, the Justice Department is already under fire with several Democratic lawmakers who have contended that the department is acting illegally by failing to release all of the files by the legal deadline that was 30 days after the signing of president.
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