The Department of Justice released its latest tranche of Epstein-related documents and photos late Monday along with a statement on the department’s official social media account: The files contain “untrue and sensationalist claims made against President Trump,” it said. “To be clear: the claims are unfounded and false, and if they had a shred of credibility, they certainly would have been weaponized against President Trump already.”
First, the U.S. Department of Justice, an agency charged with serving the American people and victims of crime, should not be acting as a defense for Donald Trump. These disclosures are being made in connection with a federal law. The Epstein Files Transparency Act is broad and clear in a way that many statutes are not. Understanding it doesn’t require careful parsing or statutory analysis. It is intended to do one thing: get information, all of the information, out into the public arena. If something in those disclosures makes Trump look bad in some way (as he apparently thinks it does), he can explain it himself or through his political apparatus.
But the Justice Department’s noncompliance with the law and its political defense of Trump are themselves telling.
The legislative branch (and the public) actually listened to survivors and crafted a law for the benefit of women who have been demanding information to move forward from trauma they experienced at the hands of child predators and a justice system stacked against them. But current Justice Department leadership has been using the survivors as a shield to justify its failure to comply with the mandated release of information.
Ordinarily, the Department of Justice would not release files or information about uncharged individuals. The Justice Department does not normally release internal memos or deliberations about its charging decisions. There are good reasons behind these policies, like protecting reputational harm to individuals when evidence of a crime cannot be proven. Similarly, the Justice Department normally does not publicly release grand jury testimony or information because of secrecy laws barring exactly that.
The Justice Department’s noncompliance with the law and its political defense of Trump are telling.
But the Epstein Files Transparency Act changed all of that in this circumstance. It overrides that normal process with respect to a wide range of information in the department’s possession. Among the broad categories of people and entities it covers are Justice Department and FBI investigations of Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, other Epstein’s “associates,” and “[i]ndividuals, including government officials, named or referenced in connection with Epstein’s criminal activities, civil settlements, immunity or plea agreements, or investigatory proceedings” and “[e]ntities (corporate, nonprofit, academic, or governmental) with known or alleged ties to Epstein’s trafficking or financial networks.”
Additionally, the law overrides the typical process with regard to broad categories of information, including “non-prosecution agreements, plea bargains, or sealed settlements involving Epstein or his associates” and “internal DOJ communications” concerning “decisions to charge, not charge, investigate, or decline to investigate Epstein or his associates.”
The law does allow for redactions, with respect to “personally identifiable information of victims” and other exceptions related to the victims, child sex abuse materials and information that would “jeopardize an active federal investigation or ongoing prosecution, provided that such withholding is narrowly tailored and temporary.” There are also exceptions for information that pertains to national security or foreign policy.








