Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein are seen in this image released by the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., U.S., on December 19, 2025 as part of a new trove of documents from its investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Date and context is unclear.
U.s. Justice Department | Via Reuters
The Department of Justice on Friday is releasing more than three million additional pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, along with more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said.
The large release comes after weeks of criticism that the DOJ was not complying with the requirement under federal law that all files related to the notorious sex offender Epstein be publicly released by Dec. 19.
Blanche said Friday the DOJ was not releasing the rest of the more than six million total pages that have been identified as potentially responsive to the Epstein Transparency Act.
Speaking at a press conference at DOJ headquarters in Washington, D.C., Blanche said that more than 500 DOJ lawyers and other personnel had spent the past 75 days reviewing potential material related to Epstein and determining what needed to be released under the law.
Deputy U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks during a press conference at the Justice Department in Washington, D.C., U.S., Jan. 30, 2026.
Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters
“We’re releasing more than three million pages today, and not the six million pages that we collected,” Blanche said.
He said that no more documents would be released. The large release on Friday comes weeks after DOJ released a much-smaller tranche of Epstein-related documents on Dec. 19.
Some of the material released relates to Epstein’s convicted accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for crimes related to procuring underage girls for him to abuse. Epstein killed himself in a federal jail in New York City in August 2019, weeks after being arrested on child sex trafficking charges.
The DOJ said that any material not being released fell within one of four categories: duplicate documents between investigations federal prosecutors in New York and Florida; “withheld under privilege … deliberative process privilege, attorney client privilege; “withheld based upon exceptions under the act (depictions of violence);” and “items that were that are not part of the case file for Epstein or Maxwell and were completely unrelated to these cases.”
“We complied with the statute,” Blanche said Friday. “We complied with the act. We did not protect President Trump … or anybody.”
President Donald Trump had been friends with Epstein for years before the two men had a falling out in the mid-2000s.
“There’s not some tranche of super-secret documents about Jeffrey Epstein that we’re withholding,” Blanche said.
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