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Congress Sends Epstein Records Transparency Bill to Trump as DOJ Opens New Review

A fresh DOJ review led by Jay Clayton, coupled with broad statutory exceptions, leaves full, immediate disclosure uncertain.

Overview

  • The House passed the measure 427–1 and the Senate approved it by unanimous consent, and President Donald Trump has said he will sign it.
  • The law orders Attorney General Pam Bondi to publish within 30 days all non‑classified DOJ files related to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, with a 15‑day report to Congress explaining any redactions.
  • Permitted withholdings include victim identities, child sexual abuse material, national security sensitivities, and information tied to active federal investigations, with grand jury secrecy also preserved.
  • Bondi said the department will follow the law and announced a new review led by U.S. attorney Jay Clayton after Trump directed scrutiny of certain Democrats, a process critics warn could justify withholding records.
  • Survivors celebrated the votes after weeks of public pressure, and the recent House Oversight release of roughly 23,000 pages raised the stakes, with legal challenges expected over the scope of disclosures.