Overview
- The House Oversight Committee published more than 33,000 DOJ-provided pages, largely previously public, including Ghislaine Maxwell interview materials and two MCC surveillance videos tied to Epstein’s 2019 death.
 - The released clips address the disputed “minute lost,” with documents characterizing the gap as a technical recording reset at midnight rather than intentional manipulation.
 - Survivors gathered at the Capitol to demand full transparency and said they will compile a confidential list of alleged abusers if authorities do not release more records.
 - Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna are pressing a discharge petition to force a vote on releasing remaining files, saying they need two more Republican signatures as House leaders and the White House resist.
 - President Trump dismissed the push as a “Democrat hoax” and a distraction, while DOJ and the FBI maintain their July findings that Epstein died by suicide and that no client list exists.