DOJ, Trump and Jeffrey Epstein
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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.
Takeaways from the latest release of Epstein files including pictures of Bill Clinton and Mick Jagger. DOJ says more records are on the way.
New Epstein files include photos, documents with redactions as DOJ releases initial trove of records
The Justice Department has released records from the Epstein files, the first documents to come to light under a new law signed by President Trump.
The White House says the Trump administration is "the most transparent in history" and has "done more for the victims than the Democrats ever have".
Republican criticism fell short of a broad party backlash while underscoring that the problem isn't going away.
The episode has deepened concerns that had already emerged from the Justice Department's much-anticipated document release.
Bill Clinton, Mick Jagger, Michael Jackson, Richard Branson and the New York Times' David Brooks are among the images in the Epstein files.
The Justice Department released new documents related to the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.
19hon MSN
Epstein files offer scant new insight into his crimes or how he avoided serious prosecution
The Justice Department’s much-anticipated release of records tied to Jeffrey Epstein arrived in a flood of documents that did little to quell the long-simmering intrigue, largely because some of the most consequential records were nowhere to be found.
In the latest "SNL" cold open, President Trump (James Austin Johnson) delivered a holiday message revealing why he is "inventing my own Hunger Games."