Group Set up to Support UK Police Forces After Release of the Epstein Files
The DOJ released over three million Epstein-related documents with extensive redactions and monitored congressional review, prompting allegations of cover-up and intimidation by lawmakers.
- On 30 January, the U.S. Department of Justice released three million pages of Jeffrey Epstein files, expanding the public record with the largest tranche to date.
- Congress ordered the disclosures under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, securing member access to unredacted files after months of pressure from media, victims' representatives, and lawmakers.
- Representative Jamie Raskin said the DOJ made unnecessary redactions and monitored lawmakers' searches of unredacted files.
- In Europe, the disclosures led to resignations and a criminal inquiry involving Peter Mandelson, while U.S. Congress has scheduled additional hearings and oversight as disclosures proceed.
- The archive shows that Epstein functioned as a broker within a transnational network of political and financial elites, and analysts note millions of unreleased files mentioning Donald Trump frequently.
16 Articles
16 Articles
Tamara Keith and Amy Walter on public reaction to Epstein
NPR’s Tamara Keith and Amy Walter of the Cook Political Report with Amy Walter join Amna Nawaz to discuss the latest political news, including who is facing pressure to make a deal to end the partial government shutdown, how the public is responding to the release of the Epstein files and their favorite fictional presidents.
The Silence: Inside the Chopra-Epstein Files
Set Your Pulse: Take a breath. Turn your attention to your body and release any tension. Breathe slowly into the area of your heart for 60 seconds, focusing on feeling a sense of ease. Stay connected to your body as you read. Click here to learn why we suggest this.Below is a very good essay written by Scott Mills. I wanted to showcase this to all of you with some added thoughts, as I find this subject important to discuss out in the open. In hi…
Epstein files: Inside a depraved transatlantic elite and the institutions that protected it
The release of millions of pages linked to Jeffrey Epstein has expanded scrutiny of political, financial and cultural elites in the United States and Europe. Congress ordered the disclosures under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. After months of pressure from the media and some lawmakers, finally the Department of Justice and the FBI published millions of highly redacted emails, investigative files, financial records, flight manifests, photog…
Tamara Keith and Amy Walter on the public's response to the Epstein files
NPR’s Tamara Keith and Amy Walter of the Cook Political Report with Amy Walter join Amna Nawaz to discuss the latest political news, including who is facing pressure to make a deal to end the partial government shutdown, how the public is responding to the release of the Epstein files and their favorite fictional presidents.
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