The House Oversight Committee has released a massive cache of 33,295 pages of documents tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. The files, provided by the Department of Justice, include court records, victim testimony, flight logs from Epstein’s private jet, and police body-camera footage.
While the release is significant in scale, lawmakers and advocates noted that much of the information had already been made public in earlier disclosures. Critics argue that the latest batch still falls short of full transparency, as many records remain withheld.
Survivors and their supporters continue to press for complete access to the files, excluding identifying details of victims. A bipartisan group in Congress is now pushing legislation that would mandate the release of all remaining Epstein-related records in redacted form.
The move underscores growing political pressure surrounding the case, with renewed scrutiny on government handling of Epstein’s network and calls for broader accountability.
