The United States Government published this Friday hundreds of thousands of files of the investigation into the pedophile Jeffrey Epstein through a public consultation portal of the Department of Justice, coinciding with the deadline imposed by the law that obliges the Trump Administration to disclose all unclassified information about the case.
Specifically, it is more than 300,000 pages with all kinds of documents, many of them censoredpublished in a portal that includes a search bar.
It also allows direct access to court records, Department of Justice disclosures, material falling under the Freedom of Information Act, and documentation that the House Oversight Committee has also been publishing since September.
The US Department of Justice releases a library of new documents from late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, seen on this home page and staged for a Reuters photo in Washington, DC, the United States, December 19, 2025.
Reuters
The sensitive nature of the case complicates the release of files, as each document has been examined and redacted to conceal sensitive information in order to protect the victims. That is why the publication of the files may not be substantial in finding out new information about the pedophile and his surroundings.
The new files
Among the new files are videos and photographs of Epstein’s trips with his ex-girlfriend and collaborator, Ghislaine Maxwell, security recordings from his residences, videos from the pedophile’s cell before he committed suicide, images of parties or agendas with masseuse contacts censored to protect the safety of the victims.
The files also include several photos of Michael Jackson and the former Democratic president Bill Clintonwhich could contradict the Justice Department’s policy of not releasing material related to ongoing investigations. In one image, Clinton is seen in a pool with Maxwell and another person whose face is covered.

Former US President Bill Clinton swims in a pool in this image released by the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, US, on December 19, 2025, as part of a new set of documents from its investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Reuters
In a letter to Congress, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has reported that hThere are more than 1,200 names identified as victims or their relatives thanks to these files.
In addition, he added that there are more documents that have not yet been published, as the prosecution continues to review “several hundred thousand more documents” that could come to light within a period of two weeks.
That is why it has warned that not all the files will be able to be published this Friday, as requires the law approved by Congress: sIt is believed that the material that the Government is obliged to publish occupies more than 300 gigabytes, including images, text documents or videos.