The US Department of Justice has published “hundreds of thousands of documents” from the ‘Epstein case’ and has even activated a portal to consult them on the internet. It is only about a part of the immense wealth of information in the power of the Executive led by Donald Trump.
The movement of Donald Trump’s Government arrives to the limit of the term imposed by law to release all unclassified information from the investigation into pedophile and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
He portal, called ‘Epstein Library’, It includes a search bar and also allows direct access to court records, disclosures from the Department of Justice, material that falls under the Freedom of Information Law and the documentation that the House oversight committee has also been publishing since September. For example, the transcripts of the interrogations of Epstein’s ex-partner and accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Several have also been published security camera videosand flight log which consists of more than a hundred pages, a list of evidence, a contact book and a list of masseuses (more than 250), whose identities have been redacted to protect the victims.
Other especially sensitive contents are descriptions of sexual assaultwarning that “certain sections of this library may not be appropriate for all readers.”
However, the Department of Justice has indicated that The portal “will be updated if additional documents are identified for publication“, noting that, in light of the Congressional deadline, all reasonable efforts have been made to review and redact victims’ personal information and protect sensitive information from disclosure.
Hours earlier, Democrats redoubled their pressure campaign against Trump, a former friend of Epstein, by publishing another batch of related photos with the sexual offender in which they appeared, among others, the intelectual Noam Chomsky aboard the deceased billionaire’s plane.
That package of photos, approximately 70, included several censored women’s passports, as well as text messages about their alleged recruitment, and phrases from the novel Lolitaby Vladimir Nabokov, written on female body parts.
