Jeffrey Epstein, DOJ and Donald Trump
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One of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims has blasted the Justice Department after the agency accidentally identified her in the trove of documents released over the weekend. Attorney Aaron Parnas said the Justice Department failed to properly redact the name of the woman while continuing to delay the release of all investigative files required by law.
It’s kind of disappointing to see that our own Department of Justice is trying to continue to gaslight us,” said the brother of one of Jeffrey Epstein's most prominent accusers.
The DOJ's Jeffrey Epstein files website crashed during its release, prompting complaints about technical glitches and heavy redactions. AG Pam Bondi's department defended its work.
Democrats warned they’re "examining all legal options" to hold the administration accountable to Friday's deadline to the release of all DOJ files on Jeffrey Epstein.
Democrats said that the delay violates the law, which required the DOJ to release "all unclassified records" with limited exceptions, including to protect the victims.
The DOJ has vowed to prosecute people accused of assaulting federal officers during protests of Trump’s immigration policies. But an AP review shows they have struggled to deliver on that commitment.
The Trump administration has shuttered a Reagan-era program that coordinated major transnational crime investigations.
Nevada is one of 18 states being sued by the U.S. Department of Justice lawsuit over access to voters' personal data ahead of 2026 midterm elections.