The Justice Department has started transferring documents connected to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation to the House Oversight Committee, pursuant to a subpoena issued earlier this month. Committee Chair Rep. James Comer confirmed that the delivery began on Friday, comprising hundreds—or possibly thousands—of pages.
While the documents are currently limited to committee members, both Republicans and Democrats have access under divided review procedures. The material is undergoing a detailed review process, which includes redacting sensitive information such as the identities of victims and any content involving minors. The committee has not announced a timeline for when these files might be made public.
This move marks the latest phase in a bipartisan push for transparency into the Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell cases—keeping both public attention and political scrutiny firmly on the Justice Department’s handling of the investigation.
