
US Justice Department to hand over Epstein files
The move that appears to avert, at least temporarily, a potential separation of powers clash.
The records are to be turned over starting on Friday to the House Oversight Committee, which earlier this month issued a broad subpoena to the Justice Department about a criminal case that has long captivated public attention, recently roiled the top rungs of President Donald Trump's administration and been a consistent magnet for conspiracy theories.
"There are many records in DOJ's custody, and it will take the Department time to produce all the records and ensure the identification of victims and any child sexual abuse material are redacted," James Comer, the Republican committee chair, said in a statement on Monday.
"I appreciate the Trump Administration's commitment to transparency and efforts to provide the American people with information about this matter."
A wealthy and well-connected financier, Epstein was found dead in his New York jail cell weeks after his 2019 arrest in what investigators ruled a suicide.
His former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, was convicted in 2021 of helping lure teenage girls to be sexually abused by Epstein and is serving a 20-year prison sentence.
The House committee's subpoena sought all documents and communications from the case files of Epstein and Maxwell.
It also demanded records about communications between Democratic President Joe Biden's administration and the Justice Department regarding Epstein, as well as documents related to an earlier federal investigation into Epstein in Florida that resulted in a non-prosecution agreement.
It was not clear exactly which or how many documents might be produced or whether the co-operation with Congress reflected a broader change in posture since last month, when the FBI and Justice Department abruptly announced that they would not be releasing any additional records from the Epstein investigation after determining that no "further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted".
That announcement put the Trump administration on the defensive, with officials since then scrambling both to tamp down angry questions from the president's base and also labouring to appear transparent.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche interviewed Maxwell at a Florida courthouse last month — though no records from those conversations have been made public — and the Justice Department has also sought to unseal grand jury transcripts in the Epstein and Maxwell cases, though so far those requests have been denied.
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