MILLIONS of explosive new Epstein files dumped by DoJ in shock release: Live updates

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced on Friday morning that the Department of Justice had released at least three million new Epstein files to the public.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced on Friday morning that the Department of Justice had released at least three million new Epstein files to the public.

Hundreds of thousands of Epstein-related documents had already been made public by the House Committee on Oversight in late 2025, including sickening images showing Epstein surrounded by young-looking women.

The files, released following Epstein’s death in 2019, contain disturbing photographs of women’s bodies, harrowing notes, and references to famous figures including former President Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson.

Previous document dumps have sparked fierce backlash after large swathes of material were heavily redacted by the Justice Department. Officials said the caveats were necessary to protect victims’ privacy, national security, and other sensitive interests.

Epstein’s longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell has since claimed that 29 of Epstein’s associates were shielded through ‘secret settlements’ with the Justice Department. The allegation was made in a habeas corpus petition she filed on December 17 seeking to overturn her conviction.

Key Epstein files dates:

Breaking:DOJ releases new trove of Epstein files

The Department of Justice released at least three million pages of documents linked to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche announced that the department published 'more than three million pages, including more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images in total.'

'That means the department produced approximately 3.5 million pages in compliance with the act,' he said.

Hundreds of thousands of documents from the investigation into his sex crimes have already been made public.

Those documents include images of the disgraced financier and his longtime associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, socializing with high-profile figures, including former president Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson.

16:21

Blanche acknowledges redaction errors in files

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche admitted 'mistakes are inevitable' in Epstein files redactions.

'The attorney general, the director of the FBI, and our partners throughout this administration work hard every single day to protect the most vulnerable among us with the protection of this magnitude,' he said.

'Mistakes are inevitable. We, of course, want to immediately correct any redaction errors that our team may have made.'

16:17

DOJ redacts images of women

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche explained the DOJ's redaction process.

'The categories of documents withheld include those permitted under the act to be withheld, files that contain personally identifiable information of victims, personal and medical files and similar files,' he said.

'The disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.'

Blanche said 'extensive reactions' have been done to the files to protect victims, and all women have been blocked out.

'With the exception of Maxwell, we did not redact images of any man unless it was impossible to redact the woman without also redacting the man,' he said.

'To this end, though, and to ensure transparency, if any member of Congress wishes to review any portions of the responsive production in any unredacted form, they're welcome to make arrangements with the department to do so.'

16:10

Deputy AG holds Epstein files press conference

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche is holding a press conference to discuss the newly published Epstein files.

'I'm here today to talk about the department's compliance with its production obligations,' he said.

'We are also releasing today a letter we are transmitting to Congress and various internal protocols associated with our review.'

16:09

Everything we KNOW is missing from Epstein files release as fury grows over huge redactions

The release of the Epstein files has been met with a growing backlash after huge swathes of the documents were redacted.

The Department of Justice dumped hundreds of thousands of pages on Friday in line with last month's law compelling their release.

The legislation lays out specific guidelines on what could and could not legally be redacted in regards to documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender who died in a New York jail cell in 2019.