US House panel releases 33,000 pages of Epstein files

US House Committee has released over 33,000 pages of documents from the federal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, including flight logs, court records, emails, audio, and jail surveillance footage, BBC reported.

Chairman James Comer, who subpoenaed the Justice Department for the files, admitted they offer little new information. Democrats said nearly all the material was already public, with no evidence of a “client list.” The only fresh detail was customs records of Epstein’s flights to and from his private island.

The files include extended jail video from the night of Epstein’s 2019 death, but the unexplained “missing minute” remains unresolved. Other records feature blurred victim interviews and police searches of his Florida home.

Lawmakers from both parties continue to press for full transparency. A bipartisan bill seeks to force the Justice Department to release all Epstein files within 30 days. Survivors, who met privately with congressional leaders, will join lawmakers at a press conference on Capitol Hill this week, according to BBC.