As Christmas Eve unfolds with stockings hung and silent nights anticipated, the U.S. Department of Justice’s third major Epstein document release on December 23 exploded onto the scene—nearly 30,000 pages filled with repeated references to President Donald Trump, chilling new photos of him alongside Ghislaine Maxwell, and flight logs detailing at least eight 1990s trips on Jeffrey Epstein’s private jet, including one with only Trump, Epstein, and a redacted 20-year-old woman.
These records, flagged in a 2020 prosecutor’s email, show domestic flights with Maxwell on several occasions, resurfacing ties Trump has long minimized. While no wrongdoing is alleged and the DOJ labels some claims “unfounded and sensationalist,” the vivid visuals and details are riveting the nation amid holiday cheer.
With over a million more documents just uncovered, this Christmas feels unforgettable for the elite—what revelations lurk in the shadows next?

As Christmas Eve unfolds with stockings hung, carols echoing, and families anticipating a silent night, the U.S. Department of Justice’s explosive third major release of Jeffrey Epstein documents on December 23, 2025, has exploded onto the scene, shattering any semblance of holiday tranquility. This massive tranche—nearly 30,000 pages of investigative files, emails, photos, and flight logs—contains hundreds of references to President Donald Trump, including chilling new images of him posing alongside Ghislaine Maxwell and detailed records confirming he boarded Epstein’s infamous private jet at least eight times in the 1990s.
The disclosures, mandated in part by the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed by Trump himself last month, include a January 2020 email from a New York federal prosecutor alerting colleagues that flight logs revealed Trump had flown on Epstein’s plane “many more times than previously has been reported (or that we were aware).” Specifically, Trump is listed on at least eight flights between 1993 and 1996, with Ghislaine Maxwell—Epstein’s convicted accomplice now serving 20 years for sex trafficking—present on at least four. One 1993 flight had only Trump and Epstein aboard; another listed just Trump, Epstein, and a redacted 20-year-old woman. Other trips included Trump’s then-wife Marla Maples and his young children Eric and Tiffany.
All flights were domestic—shuttling between Palm Beach, Florida; New Jersey; and Washington, D.C.—with no evidence in the records of Trump ever visiting Epstein’s notorious private island, Little St. James, the alleged epicenter of much of the abuse. Newly unsealed photos show Trump and Maxwell smiling at social events, while subpoenas targeted Mar-a-Lago employment records over claims Epstein recruited staff there.
Trump has long minimized these ties, insisting his relationship with Epstein soured years before the financier’s crimes fully emerged, calling him a “creep” and denying any island visits or wrongdoing. Federal investigators have never accused him of criminal conduct related to Epstein.
The DOJ quickly cautioned that the files include “untrue and sensationalist claims” against Trump, pointing to a purported 2019 jail letter from Epstein to fellow abuser Larry Nassar making crude references to the president—later confirmed fake by the FBI due to mismatched handwriting, a Virginia postmark (Epstein was in New York), and processing three days after Epstein’s death.
On December 24, the department revealed an even larger bombshell: the FBI and Southern District of New York prosecutors have uncovered over one million additional potential documents, delaying full review for weeks to protect victim privacy.
While riveting the nation with vivid visuals of elite socializing and private jet logs, this batch adds no new allegations of misconduct against Trump—much of the material echoes details from Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial or old media reports. Yet amid holiday cheer, the timing and sheer volume have reignited fierce debate, with critics accusing delays and redactions, and supporters dismissing it as recycled sensationalism.
As more than a million pages lurk in the shadows, this Christmas feels unforgettable for America’s powerful: the Epstein web of connections continues unraveling, promising further revelations that could redefine legacies in the new year.
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