The House Oversight Committee has begun releasing documents linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The move aims to provide more transparency in a case that has long attracted national attention. Committee Chair Rep. James Comer (R-KY) subpoenaed the Justice Department in early August, with bipartisan support to obtain the records.
Over 33,000 pages of documents are now publicly available, though it is unclear how much new information the files contain.
“Today, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform released 33,295 pages of Epstein-related records that were provided by the U.S. Department of Justice. On August 5, Chairman Comer issued a subpoena for records related to Mr. Jeffrey Epstein, and the Department of Justice has indicated it will continue producing those records while ensuring the redaction of victim identities and any child sexual abuse material,” the committee said.
The documents have been uploaded to a Google Drive for public access. Epstein-related documents can be found here. Backup access can be found here.
Lawmakers Claim DOJ Withholding Information
Democrats on the committee criticized the Department of Justice (DOJ) for limiting access to important material. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) said:”Only 3% of the documents given to the Oversight Committee are new. The rest are already in the public domain. Less than 1% of files have been released. DOJ is stonewalling.”
Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA) added that most released pages were recycled, with only about 1,000 new pages from Customs and Border Protection flight logs between 2000 and 2014.
Broader Investigation Includes High-Profile Figures
The Oversight Committee is also seeking testimony from political figures, including Bill and Hillary Clinton, showing lawmakers’ intent to fully investigate Epstein’s network. Experts note that the limited documents and absence of new witness testimony leave key questions unanswered, including Epstein’s connections to high-profile individuals like former President Donald Trump.
Maxwell Comments on Trump
Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former associate, recently told Justice Department investigators that she never saw Trump behave inappropriately. In interviews conducted by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, Maxwell described Trump as “a gentleman in all respects” and said she never observed misconduct.
She recalled visiting Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, possibly first meeting him around 1990, and said she had not seen him since the mid-2000s. When asked if Epstein or others suggested Trump acted improperly, she replied, “Absolutely never, in any context.”
These statements contrast with Maxwell’s 2021 trial, where multiple women described being recruited as teenagers to provide sexual massages and later being abused by Epstein. Maxwell was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. She was recently transferred from a low-security Florida facility to a prison camp in Texas.



