Nicholas
Confessore
Jan. 30,
2026, 3:46 p.m. ET51 minutes ago
Nicholas
Confessore
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/01/30/us/epstein-files-release#trump-epstein-tips-fed
The
F.B.I. compiled a summary of accusations mentioning President Trump.
Officials
at the Federal Bureau of Investigation last summer assembled a summary of more
than a dozen tips received by the agency involving President Trump and Jeffrey
Epstein, according to emails released by the Department of Justice on Friday.
It is
unclear why the investigators assembled the summary, which includes accusations
of sexual abuse by Mr. Epstein and Mr. Trump. The emails did not include any
corroborating evidence and The New York Times is not describing the details of
the unverified claims.
The
emails summarized tips sent to the F.B.I.’s National Threat Operations Center
in West Virginia, which fields a large volume of calls from around the country,
allowing members of the public to submit crime tips to the agency.
The
emails do not state when the tips were received. Some of the alleged incidents
refer to tips for which underlying documents have been previously released by
the government.
Todd
Blanche, the deputy attorney general, said at a news conference on Friday that
the White House had no involvement in the review of Epstein documents. He also
said there was no material in the files that would prompt additional
prosecutions.
In
response to a request for comment, the White House referred to a public
statement from the Justice Department, which stated that Friday’s documents
“may include fake or falsely submitted images, documents or videos.” It also
said that some of the documents contain false claims against President Trump
that were submitted to the F.B.I. before the 2020 election.
Links to
the emails, which were posted with millions of other Epstein-related documents
on the Department of Justice’s website on Friday morning, stopped working for a
few hours but were then restored.
A Justice
Department spokeswoman said the document in question was down “due to
overload.”
In a
previous release last month, Justice Department officials posted, then took
down, an image of many photographs, including a picture of Mr. Trump, on a
credenza. Department officials said they took it down to make sure it did not
include images of any victims, and then reposted the image in its online
library of Epstein documents.
A second
summary in the same email chain released on Friday, which also included tips
send to the office of the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York,
suggested that investigators had followed up on at least some of the tips.
Notes indicated that some tips lacked credibility. Some of the tipsters did not
provide contact information for investigators.
The
document logs efforts to investigate some of the tips. But the names of the
tipsters were redacted, as were entries in a column in the second document
marked “criminal history.” It is unclear what the final disposition of the
department’s follow-up efforts were.


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