View in browser There was a moment this fall when it seemed like the public might actually get some answers—that the extent of the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's crimes might be exposed, and that his victims might see the accountability they've been waiting for. On November 19, President Trump reluctantly signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which required the Justice Department to publish a huge number of its unclassified files related to the late financier (and unrelated to ongoing investigations) within 30 days. But what actually arrived on December 19, the Friday before Christmas, was a relatively small (and sloppily redacted) tranche of files that raised far more questions than it answered. Nearly a month later, not a whole lot has changed. Despite having published a second batch, the DOJ has still released less than 1 percent of the millions of documents now under review. If the Justice Department has legitimate reasons for its delay, it hasn't thoroughly explained what they are. In a letter yesterday, Attorney General Pam Bondi and other DOJ officials framed the problem as purely logistical, citing "inevitable glitches due to the sheer volume of materials." They noted that the department has put "over five hundred reviewers" on the project, even as they declined to clarify when they would release more files. Frank Figliuzzi, a former high-ranking FBI official who has handled nationwide investigations involving massive amounts of raw data, told me he's skeptical of that defense. During his tenure, he explained, the bureau became highly digitized, bringing in all sorts of new tools to speed up the process of redactions and disclosures. "If we're led to believe that human beings have to go through all of this, I'm not buying all of that," he said. Legal experts and legislators maintain that Bondi and her department are now in clear violation of the law. Earlier this week, 19 of Epstein's victims requested that a Justice Department watchdog review the agency's work, alleging that the redactions have not adequately concealed survivors' names and identifiers. Representatives Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie, who introduced the Transparency Act as a bipartisan bill, have suggested that Bondi be held in contempt for missing the deadline. Other lawmakers have batted around the idea of impeaching her. But these moves would require real political willpower—so far, neither of them has come to pass. In lieu of consistent communication with Congress and the public about the delays, the Justice Department is providing a slow drip of updates in the form of legal memos and enigmatic new uploads to the existing database of Epstein files. The department has also equivocated about the scope of its documents: Last February, shortly after being confirmed as attorney general, Bondi declared that Epstein's fabled "client list" was "sitting on my desk right now"—but in July, the DOJ said in a memo that no such client list ever existed. That same memo claimed that the department had conducted an "exhaustive review" of the files—but earlier this month, Bondi told a judge that "more than 2 million documents" were still in "various phases of review." My colleague Sarah Fitzpatrick, who covers the DOJ, explained to me that the Epstein case has been plagued by a long list of issues, omissions, and breaches of Justice Department policy—a pattern that has persisted ever since Epstein became a focus of federal law enforcement. Although the release of the files is purportedly about "transparency," the Justice Department has been suffering from a lack of public trust. Trump has used the agency to investigate and even prosecute his enemies, and its employees have left by the thousands since he took office. This broader transformation of the DOJ has only compounded the communication issues around the Epstein files, and exacerbated conspiracy theories. (The department did not respond to a request for comment.) The Epstein saga has also recently entered a new phase of political infighting. This week, the GOP-led House Oversight Committee called on former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to testify about Epstein. They refused—and, in a statement, accused Committee Chair James Comer of selectively enforcing subpoenas. "The decisions you have made, and the priorities you have set as chairman regarding the Epstein investigation, have prevented progress in discovering the facts about the government's role," they wrote. There could be an element of truth here—Comer may be using the Clintons as a distraction from Trump's connections to Epstein—but they, like Bondi, are not above the law, and their refusal to cooperate only hampers the larger process. Each new revelation about the files seems to multiply the unknowns. The Transparency Act, which passed with overwhelming bipartisan support, represents one path to accountability. If only Congress had the will to enforce it.
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