The Justice Department on Friday released a set of publicly downloadable files in response to a law passed by Congress. You can see and search them at this link on the department’s website.
On a site that it calls an “Epstein Library,” the files are sorted into multiple categories:
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Court records from criminal and civil cases;
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Disclosures the Justice Department said it made to comply with a law passed by Congress and signed by President Trump in November;
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Material it has released in response to public records requests;
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A batch of files it released in September to the House Oversight Committee, much of which contained material that was already public.
The Justice Department warned that some of the library’s contents include descriptions of sexual assault, advising that portions of the database may not be appropriate for all readers.
Michael Gold covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on immigration policy and congressional oversight.
The post How to See the Epstein Files Released on Friday appeared first on New York Times.




