Justice Department releases 3 million pages from its Jeffrey Epstein files
- On Friday, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced the Justice Department posted more than 3 million pages under the Epstein Files Transparency Act on the department's website.
- After months of pressure, Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but the Justice Department missed a Dec. 19 deadline and assigned hundreds of DOJ lawyers to review records for redactions.
- Files include photographs, interview transcripts, call logs and court records among tens of thousands of pages released, and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said victims' identities and women's faces were redacted.
- Officials said further releases are expected as the review continues amid intense scrutiny, and the records include flight logs showing Donald Trump flew on Epstein's jet plus photos of former President Bill Clinton.
- Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking and is serving a 20-year sentence at a Texas prison camp.
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696 Articles
The U.S. president has been quoted thousands of times in the new salve of Jeffrey Epstein-related documents released last weekend.
Epstein denied he was 'the devil' in video from latest file dump
Jeffrey Epstein denied he was the "devil" and insisted he was only the lowest level of sexual predator in a video interview included in the latest release of files by United States authorities. The interview, which lasts around two hours, was conducted by President Donald Trump's former adviser Steve Bannon. It appears to be filmed in the deceased financier's New York home on an unknown date. Documents concerning Epstein and government investiga…
Billionaire Jeffrey Epstein maintained contacts with numerous Russians with ties to the Kremlin, according to documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice. Epstein also allegedly managed Vladimir Putin's assets.
In an almost two-hour video recently broadcast by the US Department of Justice, containing the latest elements of the Epstein case, we discover a surprising scene. Donald Trump's former advisor, Steve Bannon, interrogates Jeffrey Epstein, the businessman convicted of sexual crimes, asking him if he is "the devil in person." "No, but I have a good mirror," retorts Epstein with cynicism. This sequence was made public without any details of its ori…
Among the millions of documents released, a new interview by Jeffrey Epstein resurfaces, showing the financier defending his money, his image and minimizing the seriousness of his actions.
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