1. United States
  2. N.Y.
  3. Letter

Demand Firm Deadline for Complete Epstein Files Release

To: Sen. Gillibrand, Sen. Schumer, Rep. Stefanik

From: A constituent in Fort Edward, NY

January 30

The Justice Department's recent court filing reveals a troubling pattern of delay in complying with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. More than a month past the law's mandated 30-day deadline of December 19, the Department has released only several thousand pages while acknowledging it has reviewed "several million" pages of files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Attorney General Pam Bondi, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, and U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton refuse to provide a specific completion date, stating only that they expect to finish "in the near term." This vague timeline is unacceptable given the decades of justice delayed for Epstein's victims. Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges, but his crimes date back years earlier when a controversial non-prosecution agreement halted a federal investigation into his alleged abuse of dozens of teenage girls. He served only approximately one year in county jail after pleading guilty to lesser state charges of soliciting a minor for prostitution. The victims of these crimes deserve transparency now, not at the Department's convenience. While I understand the Department cites legitimate concerns about protecting victim identifying information and conducting quality control, these processes should not become indefinite excuses for noncompliance. The Department has had months to prepare for this release and has deployed hundreds of employees to the task. A concrete deadline is both reasonable and necessary. I urge you to introduce or support legislation that establishes a firm, enforceable deadline for the complete release of all Epstein-related files with appropriate penalties for noncompliance. The Justice Department has demonstrated it will not meet deadlines without clear consequences. Congress must act to ensure the Epstein Files Transparency Act achieves its intended purpose of full disclosure and accountability.

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