The House Oversight Committee has released 33,295 pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, including court records, flight logs, surveillance footage, and interviews. The files were obtained through a subpoena from the Department of Justice and include unedited video of Epstein’s cellblock on the night of his death, expanded jail surveillance, and previously unseen audio and video interviews.
The documents were uploaded as individual image files on Google Drive, making them difficult to search or analyze. Critics argue this format undermines transparency, forcing users to manually review over 33,000 pages rather than using standard search functions. While the committee claims the release includes new material such as Customs and Border Protection flight logs from 2000 to 2014, most documents are described as repetitive or already publicly available.
Key findings include 13 hours of uncut jail surveillance footage, passenger records noting Epstein traveled with “young women,” and audio interviews describing “very, very young” girls visiting his property. The release also features transcripts of victim interviews and previously unseen content involving Ghislaine Maxwell. However, lawmakers estimate only 3% of the files contain new information, with the majority consisting of redacted court filings and duplicated records from prior disclosures.
Access to the documents is available through the House Oversight Committee’s website.