Jeffrey Epstein, DOJ
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The missing files, which were available Friday and no longer accessible by Saturday, included images of paintings depicting nude women, and one showing a series of photographs along a credenza and in drawers.
Amid no small measure of frustration about redactions and would-be cover-ups, over the weekend, the latest release of files related to Jeffrey Epstein revealed at least one thing of real, cathartic importance.
The Justice Department is denying accusations of a cover-up and of flouting a new law following its partial and extensively redacted releases of files on Jeffrey Epstein in an ever-deepening political storm President Donald Trump can’t shake.
We may learn more about Jeffrey Epstein's dealings with Les Wexner, the 88-year-old billionaire whose money and influence have shaped Columbus.
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'How in the hell': Ex-AG Bill Barr recounts Trump reaction when he told him Jeffrey Epstein was dead
Ex-Attorney General Bill Barr discusses President Donald Trump's shocked reaction to Jeffrey Epstein's apparent suicide when he called to tell him the news in 2019.
These images that appear to show a shirtless President Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein with young women aren’t real. Social media users shared purported photos of President Donald Trump and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein with young women, but these images weren’t released by the House Committee on Oversight.
F.B.I. Ignored Complaint: A woman who once worked for Epstein filed a complaint to the F.B.I. about his interest in “child pornography” in 1996, about a decade before investigators began scrutinizing his predatory behavior.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche on Sunday said the Justice Department released just a fraction of the Jeffrey Epstein files to protect survivors of sexual abuse.