Over two million pages of Jeffrey Epstein’s investigative files remain “imprisoned” inside the Department of Justice as of January 2026—despite massive public demands, survivor pleas, and a bipartisan law signed by President Trump requiring full release by December 19, 2025.
In a stunning court filing this week, the DOJ admitted it has published less than 1% of the records, citing the need for extensive redactions to protect victims and the sudden “discovery” of millions more documents that require review by over 400 lawyers.
Epstein’s survivors, who relived their nightmares to fuel the Epstein Files Transparency Act, now endure fresh anguish and distrust as delays mount and threats of contempt from sponsors Reps. Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie intensify.
What explosive details about Epstein’s powerful network are still locked away—and will public outrage finally set the truth free?

As of early January 2026, over 2 million pages of investigative files related to Jeffrey Epstein—the notorious sex trafficker who died in prison in 2019—remain sealed within the Department of Justice (DOJ), despite massive public demands, pleas from survivors, and a bipartisan law signed by President Donald Trump requiring full release by December 19, 2025.
In a stunning court filing on January 6, 2026, sent to Judge Paul Engelmayer in New York, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Todd Blanche admitted the DOJ has released only 12,285 documents (approximately 125,575 pages)—less than 1% of the total. They cited the need for extensive redactions to protect victim identities, along with the discovery of millions more new pages requiring review by over 400 attorneys.
Brave survivors of Epstein—who relived their nightmares to fuel passage of the Epstein Files Transparency Act—are now enduring fresh anguish and distrust amid mounting delays. They argue the DOJ is using victim protection as an excuse to prolong the process, causing additional trauma while the full scale of the network that abused hundreds of underage girls remains hidden.
The bill’s sponsors, Rep. Ro Khanna (Democrat, California) and Rep. Thomas Massie (Republican, Kentucky), have intensified pressure, demanding a court-appointed “special master” to oversee compliance and threatening contempt proceedings against Bondi. On January 8, 2026, they sent a letter to Judge Engelmayer, stressing the DOJ “cannot be trusted” with mandatory disclosures and questioning suspiciously inflated document counts used to justify delays.
The act, passed nearly unanimously by Congress and signed by Trump on November 19, 2025, requires release of all non-classified records from decades-long investigations in Florida and New York, including photos, videos, flight logs, and transcripts. Initial releases featured old photos of former President Bill Clinton with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell (serving a 20-year sentence), 1990s flight logs noting Trump, and mentions of other prominent figures—though the DOJ asserts no evidence of wrongdoing and states redactions primarily protect victims.
Over 400 DOJ attorneys and hundreds of FBI specialists are working day and night, but the slow pace has ignited fierce bipartisan criticism, conspiracy theories, and public outrage. The scandal exposes deep fractures in Washington over transparency and accountability, as Epstein’s elite network continues to haunt America’s power brokers ahead of the 2026 midterms.
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