The US Department of Justice has released a staggering 3 million pages of documents related to its investigation into financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The massive release, which includes over 2,000 videos and 180,000 images, marks the largest trove of files to be made public so far in the case.
During a tense press conference, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced that the release would include "extensive redactions" - a clear indication that some information will remain classified. Blanche revealed that the Trump administration had produced 3.5 million pages in an effort to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which mandated the release of certain documents.
The files, which date back over 20 years and cover multiple investigations and prosecutions, include records from the Florida and New York cases against Epstein, as well as the Ghislaine Maxwell prosecution. The Department of Justice has also filed court motions to release additional materials currently covered by protective orders from a civil lawsuit and grand jury materials from a case against corrections officers who worked at Epstein's prison facility.
Despite the massive release, around 200,000 pages were redacted or withheld due to various legal privileges, including attorney-client privilege and work-product doctrine. Blanche acknowledged that some of these redactions may have been related to personal and medical information, as well as graphic depictions of death, abuse, and injury.
The Deputy Attorney General refused to comment on whether any new names would be included in the document release. However, he did say that President Trump's involvement with Epstein had not changed since the initial investigations began.
The massive document dump follows weeks of delay after the Department of Justice conceded that only 12,285 documents totaling 125,575 pages had been published to date, far short of a 19 December deadline mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The release is expected to shed more light on systemic failures within law enforcement that allowed Epstein's abuse to go unchecked.
Earlier releases under the act have detailed harrowing testimony about the recruitment methods used to ensnare victims, including graphic accounts from grand jury witnesses. One of these witnesses described how Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly asked one victim to recruit other girls, telling her they had to look young at least - a chilling reminder of the scope and brutality of Epstein's abuse.
During a tense press conference, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced that the release would include "extensive redactions" - a clear indication that some information will remain classified. Blanche revealed that the Trump administration had produced 3.5 million pages in an effort to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which mandated the release of certain documents.
The files, which date back over 20 years and cover multiple investigations and prosecutions, include records from the Florida and New York cases against Epstein, as well as the Ghislaine Maxwell prosecution. The Department of Justice has also filed court motions to release additional materials currently covered by protective orders from a civil lawsuit and grand jury materials from a case against corrections officers who worked at Epstein's prison facility.
Despite the massive release, around 200,000 pages were redacted or withheld due to various legal privileges, including attorney-client privilege and work-product doctrine. Blanche acknowledged that some of these redactions may have been related to personal and medical information, as well as graphic depictions of death, abuse, and injury.
The Deputy Attorney General refused to comment on whether any new names would be included in the document release. However, he did say that President Trump's involvement with Epstein had not changed since the initial investigations began.
The massive document dump follows weeks of delay after the Department of Justice conceded that only 12,285 documents totaling 125,575 pages had been published to date, far short of a 19 December deadline mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The release is expected to shed more light on systemic failures within law enforcement that allowed Epstein's abuse to go unchecked.
Earlier releases under the act have detailed harrowing testimony about the recruitment methods used to ensnare victims, including graphic accounts from grand jury witnesses. One of these witnesses described how Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly asked one victim to recruit other girls, telling her they had to look young at least - a chilling reminder of the scope and brutality of Epstein's abuse.