The email from July 24, 2019, says Epstein “will be celled with” an inmate whose name was redacted, but the email describes the inmate’s crimes, and it is a perfect match for Sayoc — matching the time ...
The DOJ says it still has “hundreds of thousands” of pages to review, as the latest Epstein files release spurred more ...
The Epstein files, which look into Epstein's crimes, have caused headaches for President Trump all year, stoking the flames ...
The new documents — nearly 30,000 in all — contain hundreds of references to President Trump and include different versions of Jeffrey Epstein’s will.
Even if the DOJ dump is incomplete and heavily redacted, at least Jmail makes them easy to access—thanks to a familiar ...
Jeffrey Epstein accuser Annie Farmer tells NPR's Leila Fadel how survivors of his abuse are reacting to the Justice Department's file dump, which included her sister's 1996 FBI complaint.
Note: this tool is in development and everything including the README and the documentation is "under construction"! This is the repository for the pyJSON Schema Loader and JSON Editor - a JSON schema ...
The Justice Department’s webpage for documents related to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein is missing at least 16 of its files a day after they were released.
The Justice Department has released records from the Epstein files, the first documents to come to light under a new law ...
The episode has deepened concerns that had already emerged from the Justice Department's much-anticipated document release.
An NPR analysis of the Epstein files shows some documents, originally available on Friday, are no longer on the Department of Justice's "Epstein Library" website as the DOJ releases more files.
Thousands of files related to the investigation into sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein are publicly available on a Department of Justice webpage titled "Epstein Library" ...