Here’s
What to Know About the Millions of Pages of Epstein Documents
Deputy
Attorney General Todd Blanche signaled that this would be the last major
release of files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Ashley
Ahn
By Ashley
Ahn
Jan. 30,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/us/what-to-know-epstein-files.html
The
Department of Justice on Friday released the largest batch of Jeffrey Epstein
files to date, a giant tranche including three million more pages of documents
and thousands of videos and images.
The
documents shed new light on the disgraced financier’s relationships with
several prominent figures, including Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Commerce
Secretary Howard Lutnick. They also contain a significant number of
uncorroborated tips to law enforcement.
Congress
mandated the release in November, and President Trump signed the bill despite
initially opposing it, as he has sought to put an end to the accusations and
speculation swirling around the case. The latest batch of documents arrived
weeks after a Dec. 19 deadline imposed by Congress.
Deputy
Attorney General Todd Blanche said the White House “had nothing to do” with
vetting the released documents. “They had no oversight and they did not tell
this department how to do our review and what to look for and what to redact or
not redact,” he said.
Here’s
what else we know about the latest release of Epstein files.
The
release was voluminous.
The
department released three million pages, 2,000 videos and some 180,000 images
at about 11 a.m. Eastern on Friday. The pages consist of email chains, text
messages, news articles, internal investigative reports and other material tied
to Mr. Epstein, a convicted sex offender.
Mr.
Blanche said that the department redacted images of every woman in the files
except for Ghislaine Maxwell, Mr. Epstein’s longtime companion and associate
who has been convicted of sex trafficking.
Federal
prosecutors initially identified six million pages as “potentially responsive”
to the law requiring the department to release its files on investigations into
Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell, Mr. Blanche said. But he added that officials had
erred on the side of “over-collection” and later decided to release only half
that amount. Some Democratic lawmakers accused the department on Friday of
violating the law and demanded it release all six million pages.
The
documents contain unverified tips and allegations about Trump.
The files
appeared to contain at least 4,500 documents that mentioned Mr. Trump. One was
a summary that officials at the Federal Bureau of Investigation assembled last
summer of more than a dozen tips from members of the public involving Mr. Trump
and Mr. Epstein.
It is
unclear why the investigators put together 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.
Mr. Trump
has denied any wrongdoing in connection with Mr. Epstein. 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 contained false claims against Mr. Trump that were submitted to the
F.B.I. before the 2020 election.
Many of
the other documents were news articles or emails that referenced Mr. Trump.
The files
add details about Epstein’s relationships with several powerful men.
According
to released emails, Mr. Epstein drafted notes to and about Mr. Gates in 2013,
suggesting that he engaged in extramarital sex. The Gates Foundation called the
accusations “absolutely absurd and completely false.”
In one
email, Mr. Epstein wrote that he had helped Mr. Gates acquire drugs “in order
to deal with consequences of sex with Russian girls,” and that he had
facilitated rendezvous for Mr. Gates with married women.
It was
not clear if Mr. Epstein ever sent the emails to Mr. Gates.
The files
also revealed that Mr. Lutnick planned a visit to Mr. Epstein’s island in 2012,
though he had previously said he severed ties with Mr. Epstein around 2005.
Mr.
Lutnick told The Times on Friday that he could not comment about the island
visit because he had not seen the latest Epstein documents.
A 2013
email exchange between the British billionaire Richard Branson and Mr. Epstein
suggested that the pair had a familiar relationship, built at least in part
around their interest in women. And multiple messages between Mr. Musk and Mr.
Epstein showed the two comparing schedules to find time to meet in Florida or
in the Caribbean between 2012 and 2014.
One
document detailed a diagram of Mr. Epstein’s inner circle, including Ms.
Maxwell, his lawyer Darren Indyke and his accountant Richard Kahn.
This was
likely the last major release of Epstein files.
Mr.
Blanche signaled this batch of documents would be the last major release of the
Epstein files. He said that even these documents were unlikely to satisfy the
public demand for information about Mr. Epstein.
The
department is required to submit a report to Congress explaining why it
redacted information. Mr. Blanche said it withheld documents with personal
identifying information or medical information of Mr. Epstein’s victims. It
also withheld material depicting child sexual abuse and material that depicted
death or violence.
The
department has not yet submitted the report, but Mr. Blanche said that federal
officials would “do so in due course.”
Ashley
Ahn covers breaking news for The Times from New York.


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