Live
Updates: Trove of Epstein Files Includes New Photos and Court Records
The
material includes thousands of documents related to past investigations of
Jeffrey Epstein, as well as hundreds of images. Some depict politicians, pop
stars and royals; others show women whose faces have been redacted.
Dec. 19,
2025, 5:34 p.m. ET7 minutes ago
Devlin
Barrett Glenn
Thrush Alan
Feuer and Michael Gold
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/12/19/us/epstein-files-release
Here’s
the latest.
The
Justice Department released thousands of documents and hundreds of photographs
related to investigations of Jeffrey Epstein on Friday, responding to a
deadline set by Congress and reviving a scandal that has dogged the second
Trump administration.
The
significance of the disclosure was unknown, given the volume of the records and
how much Epstein material has been previously disclosed. And because the
Justice Department said that it had withheld some documents, citing ongoing
investigations or national security concerns, the release is as likely to
reignite the furor over the so-called Epstein files as quell it.
An
initial review of the files showed numerous photographs of people known to have
associated with Mr. Epstein, including his longtime companion Ghislaine
Maxwell, former President Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew of Britain and his former
wife Sarah Ferguson, and pop stars like Michael Jackson and Mick Jagger. The
context of the photographs, the locations where they were taken and their
connection to Mr. Epstein was frequently unclear.
Todd
Blanche, the deputy attorney general, said in a Fox News interview on Friday
morning that the Justice Department would release “several hundred thousand
documents” from its investigative files on Mr. Epstein. But he also said the
department would hold back an unknown amount of material while its lawyers
continue to comb through it.
In a
letter to members of Congress, Mr. Blanche said that the Justice Department had
identified 1,200 names of victims of Mr. Epstein or their relatives, and that
its lawyers had redacted or withheld any materials that could reveal their
identities.
In the
letter, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, Mr. Blanche wrote
that “the volume of materials to be reviewed” would lead to the release of more
documents, and that the Justice Department “will inform Congress when that
review and production are complete by the end of this year.”
Friday’s
release was mandated by an act of Congress in November. Though Republican
leaders worked for months to stop the legislation, it passed nearly unanimously
in the House and Senate and was then signed by Mr. Trump, who ultimately urged
its passage after losing a political battle to prevent it.
The White
House, fixated on the perils of a never-ending political crisis stoked by its
own encouragement of Epstein conspiracy theories, had sought for months to
block efforts to release any new information about Mr. Epstein, who had a
yearslong friendship with Mr. Trump.
Little
worked. An overhyped document dump in February produced little new material. An
unsigned statement from the Justice Department and F.B.I. in July announced
that the government had ended its review of the files and would not release
more, only for the agencies to reverse themselves after public outcry and
condemnation. And the release of more than 20,000 emails related to Mr. Epstein
and subsequent releases of images only served to renew interest in the case,
and the clamor for yet more transparency.
Here’s
what else to know.
Document
review: A preliminary review by New York Times reporters suggests that much of
the Epstein materials derive from three investigations into his interactions
with young women and girls: an initial inquiry opened by the police in Palm
Beach, Fla., in 2005; a subsequent investigation conducted by federal
prosecutors in Florida that ended in 2008 with a plea deal for Mr. Epstein; and
a final inquiry by prosecutors in Manhattan in 2019 that was never resolved
because he died in prison while the case was proceeding.
Epstein’s
emails: White House officials have acknowledged that Mr. Trump appears in the
Epstein files, and his name appeared in a trove of emails released in November.
In those messages, Mr. Epstein cast himself as a Trump insider, suggested the
president knew about his conduct with underage girls, and discussed leveraging
potentially damaging information about Mr. Trump to “take him down.”
Epstein’s
fortune: Times reporters spent months reporting the fullest portrait to date of
how Mr. Epstein used connections and leverage to amass his fortune, revealing
how, again and again, he proved willing to operate on the edge of criminality
and burn bridges in his pursuit of wealth and power.
Epstein
and Trump: Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein were longtime friends before a
falling-out. Here’s a timeline of what we know about their relationship, and a
Times investigation into how the men bonded over the pursuit of women.


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