The Justice Department on Friday released many more records from its investigative files on Jeffrey Epstein, resuming disclosures under a law intended to reveal what the government knew about the millionaire financier's sexual abuse of young girls and his interactions with rich and powerful people.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department would be releasing more than 3 million pages of documents as well as more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. The files, posted to the department's website, include some of the several million pages of records that officials said were withheld from an initial release in December.
Included were documents concerning some of Epstein's famous associates, including Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Britain's Prince Andrew, and email correspondence between Epstein and Elon Musk and other prominent contacts from across the political spectrum.
The documents were disclosed under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the law enacted after months of public and political pressure that requires the government to open its files on the late financier and his confidant and onetime girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Lawmakers complained when the Justice Department made only a limited release last month, but officials said more time was needed to review an additional trove of documents that was discovered and to scour the records to ensure no sensitive information about victims was inadvertently released.
Friday's disclosure represents the largest document dump to date about a saga the Trump administration has struggled for months to shake because of the president's previous association with Epstein. State and federal investigations into the financier have long animated online sleuths, conspiracy theorists, and others who have suspected government cover-ups and clamored for a full accounting, demands that even Blanche acknowledged might not be satisfied by the latest release.
"There's a hunger, or a thirst, for information that I don't think will be satisfied by the review of these documents," he said at a news conference.
After missing a Dec. 19 deadline set by Congress to release all the files, the Justice Department said it tasked hundreds of lawyers with reviewing the records to determine what needed to be redacted, or blacked out. But it denied any effort to shield Donald Trump, who says he cut ties with Epstein years ago after an earlier friendship, from potential embarrassment.
The latest batch of documents includes correspondence either with or about some of Epstein's friends.
The records have thousands of references to Trump, including emails in which Epstein and others shared news articles about him, commented on his policies or politics, or gossiped about him and his family. Also included was a spreadsheet created last August summarizing calls to the FBI's National Threat Operation Center or to a hotline established by prosecutors from people claiming without corroboration to have some knowledge of wrongdoing by Trump.
Mountbatten-Windsor's name appears at least several hundred times in the documents, sometimes in news clippings, sometimes in Epstein's private email correspondence and in guest lists for dinners organized by Epstein. Some of the records also document an attempt by prosecutors in New York to get the former prince to agree to be interviewed as part of their Epstein sex trafficking probe.
The records also show Musk, the billionaire Tesla founder, reached out to Epstein on at least two separate occasions to plan visits to the Caribbean island where many of the allegations of sexual abuse purportedly occurred.
In a 2012 exchange, Epstein asked how many people Musk would like flown by helicopter to the island he owned.
"Probably just Talulah and me," Musk responded, referencing his then-partner, actress Talulah Riley. "What day/night will be the wildest party on our island?"
Musk messaged Epstein again ahead of a planned Caribbean trip in 2013. "Will be in the BVI/St Bart's area over the holidays," he wrote. "Is there a good time to visit?" Epstein extended an invite for sometime after the New Year holiday.
It's not immediately clear if the island visits took place. Spokespeople for Musk's companies, Tesla and X, didn't immediately respond to emails seeking comment.
Musk has maintained that he repeatedly turned down the disgraced financier's overtures.
"Epstein tried to get me to go to his island and I REFUSED," he posted on X in 2025 last year when House Democrats released an Epstein calendar with an entry mentioning a potential Musk visit to the island.
The documents also contain friendly text messages between Epstein and Steve Bannon.
Bannon, a conservative activist who served as Trump's White House strategist earlier in the president's first term, bantered over politics with the financier, discussed get-togethers with him over breakfast, lunch, or dinner and, on March 29, 2019, asked Epstein if he could supply his plane to pick him up in Rome: "Is it possible to get your plane here to collect me?"
Epstein told him his pilot and crew "are doing their best" to arrange that flight but if Bannon could find a charter flight instead, "I'm happy to pay." Apparently in France at the time, Epstein sent a text message saying: "My guys can pick you up. Come for dinner." The exchange did not show how that played out.
On one occasion in December 2012, Epstein invited Howard Lutnick, now Trump's commerce secretary, to his private island for lunch, the records show. Lutnick's wife, Allison Lutnick, accepted the invitation and said they would arrive on a yacht with their children. On another occasion in 2011, the two men had drinks, according to a schedule shared with Epstein.
Lutnick has tried to distance himself from Epstein, saying in a 2025 interview that he cut ties decades ago. A Commerce Department spokesman said Lutnick had "limited interactions with Mr. Epstein in the presence of his wife and has never been accused of wrongdoing."
Another Epstein contact surfacing in the records is former Obama White House general counsel Kathy Ruemmler. In one of several exchanges, Epstein emailed Ruemmler to warn that Democrats should stop demonizing Trump as a Mafia-type figure even as he derided the president as a "maniac."
A spokesperson for Goldman Sachs, where Ruemmler is general counsel and chief legal officer, said in a statement that Ruemmler "had a professional association with Jeffrey Epstein when she was a lawyer in private practice" and "regrets ever knowing him."
The tens of thousands of pages of documents released last month consisted of photographs, interview transcripts, call logs, and court records.
They included previously released flight logs showing Trump flew on Epstein's private jet in the 1990s, before their falling-out, and several photographs of Bill Clinton. None of Epstein's victims who have gone public with their stories have publicly accused Trump, a Republican, nor Clinton, a Democrat, of wrongdoing.
Both have said they had no knowledge he was abusing underage girls.
Epstein killed himself in a New York jail cell in August 2019, a month after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.
In 2008 and 2009, Epstein served jail time in Florida after pleading guilty to soliciting prostitution from someone under the age of 18. At the time, investigators had gathered evidence that Epstein had sexually abused underage girls at his Palm Beach home. The U.S. attorney's office agreed not to prosecute him in exchange for his guilty plea to lesser state charges.
A draft indictment from that period released Friday shows prosecutors contemplated federal charges against not just Epstein but three others who worked for him as personal assistants. The draft indictment said those people, whose names were blacked out, were part of a conspiracy to recruit underage girls to perform lewd acts with Epstein.
In 2021, a federal jury in New York convicted Maxwell, a British socialite, of sex trafficking for helping recruit some of his underage victims. She is serving a 20-year prison sentence.
U.S. prosecutors never charged anyone else in connection with Epstein's abuse of girls, but one of his victims, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, accused him in lawsuits of having arranged for her to have sexual encounters at age 17 and 18 with numerous politicians, business titans, noted academics, and others. They all denied her allegations.
Among those she accused was Britain's Prince Andrew, who was stripped of his royal titles amid the scandal. Andrew denied having sex with Giuffre but settled her lawsuit for an undisclosed sum.
Giuffre died by suicide last year at age 41.
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