Congress passed a law last month — with near-unanimous support — requiring the Justice Department to release all of its files about Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender ...
While Democratic legislators, victims of Jeffrey Epstein and their lawyers have complained about the number of blacked-out pages and passages in the files released by the U.S. Department of Justice, ...
The Justice Department early Tuesday released more than 11,000 additional documents and photos from the Jeffrey Epstein files ...
Here is a guide to what the Justice Department has released about its investigation of Jeffrey Epstein and what to look for ...
Hackers have exposed heavily redacted information from the latest 11,034 documents in the Epstein files, released on Monday.
The email from July 24, 2019, says Epstein “will be celled with” an inmate whose name was redacted, but the email describes the inmate’s crimes, and it is a perfect match for Sayoc — matching the time ...
The DOJ says it still has “hundreds of thousands” of pages to review, as the latest Epstein files release spurred more ...
The Epstein files, which look into Epstein's crimes, have caused headaches for President Trump all year, stoking the flames ...
The Department of Justice has been publicly posting files related to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation since Friday.
A botched rollout of Epstein documents under Trump let the public bypass redactions sparking challenges and violation claims ...
The new documents — nearly 30,000 in all — contain hundreds of references to President Trump and include different versions of Jeffrey Epstein’s will.
Even if the DOJ dump is incomplete and heavily redacted, at least Jmail makes them easy to access—thanks to a familiar ...