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Epstein Victims Ask Congress to Ensure Justice Dept. Releases All Files

December 22, 2025
in News
Epstein Victims Ask Congress to Ensure Justice Dept. Releases All Files

Jess Michaels, who has said that Jeffrey Epstein sexually assaulted her more than three decades ago, said she was so upset over how the Justice Department was releasing its investigative files on the disgraced financier that she called her lawyer to draft a letter.

“I was so angry, and she took my words and put them into better context and took out all the swear words,” Ms. Michaels said. “The thing I am really frustrated with is that D.O.J. broke the law.”

The letter, signed by more than a dozen women who have said they were victims of Mr. Epstein and released on Monday, called on Congress to hold hearings to ensure that the Justice Department is fully complying with the terms of the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

The statement also notes that the women, who call themselves “Survivor Sisters,” are frustrated that the Justice Department has largely failed to meet with them or discuss their concerns.

The Justice Department has not responded to an email sent Monday requesting comment.

The law, which President Trump initially opposed but signed in November, requires the Justice Department to make public all the information it had gathered on Mr. Epstein save for limited redactions to protect the privacy of hundreds of victims.

One goal is to determine whether authorities had fully looked into whether any of the scores of wealthy and famous men once associated with Mr. Epstein had participated in the sexual abuse of teenage girls and young women.

Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, on Sunday defended the Justice Department’s public release of files. He said hundreds of agency lawyers were scouring “about a million or so pages of documents” and redacting victims’ names. Mr. Blanche said that the department anticipated posting more documents over the next few weeks.

Mr. Blanche also rejected criticism that the Justice Department was moving slowly to protect Mr. Trump, a onetime friend of Mr. Epstein’s, or anyone else who had associated with Mr. Epstein.

Mr. Epstein died by suicide while being held in a federal jail in August 2019, roughly a month after he was arrested on federal sex-trafficking charges. The law mandating the documents’ release covers the 2019 investigation into Mr. Epstein; the investigation that led to the 2021 conviction of Ghislaine Maxwell, Mr. Epstein’s partner, on related sex-trafficking charges; and a 2007 federal investigation that culminated in Mr. Epstein pleading guilty in Florida to a single state charge of soliciting prostitution from a teenage girl.

Over the weekend, some members of Congress and several victims, including Ms. Michaels, criticized the Justice Department after it released hundreds of pages of documents that were heavily redacted. They said that the government failed to produce any emails from Mr. Epstein, just a handful of his financial records and only a few statements that victims said they had given to federal authorities.

The Justice Department also has not released internal memorandums by federal prosecutors that might shed light on its charging decisions. Prosecutors commonly compile memorandums before filing an indictment or declining to prosecute.

Ms. Michaels, who has said she was sexually assaulted by Mr. Epstein in 1991 when she was 22 and training to be a dancer, said she had yet to find in the released files the statement she gave an F.B.I. agent in 2021.

Jennifer Freeman, the lawyer for Ms. Michaels and several other women who signed the statement, said she did not expect the Justice Department to officially respond. She said her clients are more focused on getting results from federal prosecutors.

Ms. Freeman said that victims may be dissatisfied with what they see in the documents ultimately released by the Justice Department.

“They weren’t issuing subpoenas of other men. I don’t think they really saw this as terribly serious matter,” Ms. Freeman said.

Ms. Freeman also represents Maria Farmer, another of Mr. Epstein’s early victims, who this year sued the federal government for failing to act on a complaint she filed with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1996, charging Mr. Epstein with sexual abuse and child pornography. The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Washington, D.C., claimed that Mr. Epstein’s decades-long sexual abuse of girls and young women could have been prevented if the F.B.I. had acted on her complaint.

Ms. Farmer was among the women who signed the statement made Monday.

Among the tens of thousands of pages released by the Justice Department over the weekend was a copy of a related 1996 complaint by Ms. Farmer that said Mr. Epstein may have engaged in “child pornography.”

Matthew Goldstein is a Times reporter who covers Wall Street and white-collar crime and housing issues.

The post Epstein Victims Ask Congress to Ensure Justice Dept. Releases All Files appeared first on New York Times.

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